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The Barite Industry in MissouriBy W. M. Weigel
Economic deposits of barite occur in Missouri in two main districts. The most important, the Southeastern or Washington County district, is in the southeastern part of the state, mostly in Washington
Jan 1, 1929
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The Broadening Road To Foreign InvestmentBy Howland Bancroft
AMERICAN investment in foreign mining interests today faces its greatest task. U. S. dollars must make possible the. steady procurement of the minerals our defense effort consumes in huge quantities.
Jan 1, 1952
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Cleveland Paper - The World's Product of SilverBy R. W. Raymond
Recent literary labors have led me to the compilation of the following tables and estimates, which may possess interest for my colleagues in the Institute, and which are here submitted without comment
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Institute of Metals Division - The Rate-Controlling Mechanism of Slip in the Intermetallic Compound AgMg at Low TemperaturesBy A. K. Mukherjee, John E. Dorn
The effects of strain rate and temperature on the critical resolved shear stress for (321)[111] slip were determined for the silver-rich CsCl type of intermetallic compound AgMg. The flow stress incre
Jan 1, 1964
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The Disseminated Copper Ores Of Bingham Canyon, UtahBy J. J. Beeson
The second part of the paper includes a detailed account of the processes of secondary-enrichment which have been effective in producing the disseminated ores. While both parts present new features, i
Jan 11, 1915
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New York Secondary Metals - The Contamination of Metal Scrap, Its Effects on the Value, and Suggested Means by Control (with Discussion)By Carl O. Theime
Industrial specialization has rapidly created a demand for new and better alloys. A more thorough understanding of the requirements of specific industries and the discovery of processes by which it ha
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The Economics of OverdevelopmentBy John Gill
THE purpose of this paper is to invite attention away from the obvious, direct monetary costs of oil-field overdevelopment (as dis-tinguished from "social costs") to a consideration of the role played
Jan 1, 1939
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Portal To The PastPennsylvania has been a leader in the pageant of industrial America because of her natural mineral re- sources, geographical location, and the ingenuity and industry of her citizens. Brick and other c
Jan 1, 1950
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Drilling–Equipment, Methods and Materials - Stresses Caused by Bit Loading at the Center of the HoleBy J. C. Wilhoit, J. B. Cheatham
Although an oil well is a long cylindrical hole with an irregular bottom, it appears likely that the nature of the stress concentration at the bottom of the hole can be ascertained from an analysis of
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Part I – January 1969 - Papers - The Low-Temperature Region (-27° to+40°C) of the Lead-Indium Phase DiagramBy Eckhard Nembach
The phase diagram of the system Pb-In has been investigated between -27° and + 40°C, using nzainly X-ray dijfraction. In accordance with t her mo dynamic measurements by Heumann and Predel, a segre
Jan 1, 1970
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Abating Stream Pollution . . . in the Anthracite Coal FieldsBy J. R. Hoffert
ON Oct. 27, 1941, the Sanitary Water Board of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania called a meeting of the representatives of the coal operators in the Schuylkill River Basin, and frankly suggested to the
Jan 3, 1950
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New York Paper - The Cloncurry Copper District, QueenslandBy W. H. Corbould
The township of Cloncurry is situated in the northwestern part of Queensland, about latitude S. 20" 42' 53" and longitude E. 140" 30' 25". Townsville is the port through which all the trade
Jan 1, 1915
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Troy Paper - The Determination of Manganese in SpiegelBy G. C. Stone
At the conclusion of my paper on the same subject read at the Boston meeting of the Institute, I offered to send some of sample No. 2 to any chemist who wished to analyze it. Eight chemists wrote to m
Jan 1, 1884
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Quarry Waste in the Indiana Limestone DistrictBy J. B. Newsom
IN the Indiana limestone district, some 50 or 60 per, cent of the merchantable stone in a quarry opening is waste, and only about 40 or 50 per cent of the stone from the opening is finally sold. So lo
Jan 1, 1932
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Engineers Work in Russia Through the Relief AdministrationBy Edgar Rickard
IT SHOULD be clearly understood that my remarks on economic conditions in Russia are entirely personal, and not official as an officer of the Ameri-can Relief Administration. The American Relief Admin
Jan 11, 1922
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Conference on Production and Design Limitation and Possibilities for Powder Metallurgy (Metal Technology, January 1945) - Electrical Contacts Manufactured from Metal PowdersBy E. I. Larsen
Powder metallurgy has been described as being "as old as the pyramids and yet as new as the latest bomber." While this may be true literally, it has been only in the last Io or 1 5 years that widespre
Jan 1, 1945
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Washington Paper - The Manufacture and Characteristics of Wrought-IronBy James P. Roe
Those who deem the subject of this paper an old and superseded one may recall with advantage the words of the great proverb-maker, bidding us to seek the new in the ashes of the old. The manufactur
Jan 1, 1906
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Mineral Status of the Far EastBy Kung-Ping Wang
The mineral potential of the Far East, important to the United States for tin and tungsten as well as other minerals, is set forth in this first installment of a two part article by a specialist in th
Jan 11, 1951
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The Mining Industry in Southeast AsiaBy D. F. Coolbaugh
Asia, the largest and most populous continent, has had little political influence on world affairs until very recently. The picture is rapidly changing. Although the cultures of various Asian countrie
Jan 10, 1960