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Geological-Geophysical Discovery of the Capillune Ground-Water Aquifer, Toquepala, PeruBy S. Parker Gay
In 1967 Southern. Peru Copper Corp. was faced with the problem of developing a water supply for their new Cuajone open-pit copper mining and milling operation, at a time when the existing water system
Jan 1, 1973
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The North Shore of Lake Superior as a Mineral¬bearing DistrictBy W. M. Courtis
THIS district commences near Pigeon River, the northeastern boundary between Minnesota and Province of Ontario, and extends entirely around the north shore of Lake Superior, terminating for the presen
Jan 1, 1877
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Papers - The "Plasticity" of Iron at low Temperatures (With Discussion)By K. Heindlhofer
Estimates of the "plasticity" of a metal are commonly deduced from three types of test—tensile, torsion and impact. The several results have been more or less at variance, though this disparity has at
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - The "Plasticity" of Iron at low Temperatures (With Discussion)By K. Heindlhofer
Estimates of the "plasticity" of a metal are commonly deduced from three types of test—tensile, torsion and impact. The several results have been more or less at variance, though this disparity has at
Jan 1, 1935
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A Laboratory Study Of The Fracturing Of Rocks By Hydraulic PressureBy A. V. Pegler
As with most rheologically defined materials, rocks react differently in different environments to similar forces. Physical changes and deformations depend as much on the rate of change of stress as t
Jan 1, 1968
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The Losses In Copper Dressing At Lake Superior.*By H. S. Munroe
THE native copper of Lake Superior occurs in the form of fine grains and scales, disseminated in small percentage through the copper-bearing rock ; and in large and small masses, from a few pounds to
Jan 1, 1880
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Rock Bolting In Metal Mines Of The NorthwestBy Lloyd Pollish, Robert N. Breckenridge
SUCCESS in any underground mining operation is determined by accessibility of the orebody, which in turn is dependent upon maintenance of passage- ways to the mining zones and temporary support of the
Jan 7, 1954
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Concerning The Differences In Guns And Their Sizes.BEFORE I go any farther, I wish to show you the different kinds of guns, as I have been able to understand them from the finished works, for no one is found to have written or spoken of this. To my kn
Jan 1, 1942
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Raw Materials Preparation at The Brandon Plant, MississippiBy J. C. Holm
Although the main constituents of Portland cement are the oxides of calcium, silicon, aluminum, and iron, characteristics of the cement are seriously affected by such contaminants in the raw materials
Jul 1, 1956
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The Project Independence Evaluation System And Its Applications To Energy Policy IssuesBy James L. Sweeney
The Project Independence Evaluation System (PIES) is a complex evaluation, forecasting, and analysis system which represents the U.S. energy production, conversion, transportation and consumption acti
Jan 1, 1977
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Coal - Are Coal-Mine Employees and Dollars Protected from Fire as Well as Other Industrial Employees and Dollars?By R. W. Stahl
Employees and dollars are necessary to all enterprises and any force, such as fire, which destroys either, can bring very serious consequences, including business failure. Since everyone acknowledg
Jan 1, 1961
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Production Control of Zinc as Viewed from the Tri-State DistrictBy P. B. Butler
IN common with others, the zinc industry found itself after the war largely over-capitalized, a condi-tion which still exists notwithstanding that Tri-State production has doubled since prewar days. T
Jan 4, 1928
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Economic Implications of Strip Mining Legislation: The Small FirmsBy G. Richard Dreese, Harold L. Bryant
The coal mining industry has had a long history of successfully externalizing part of its costs. Thus the private or internal costs of coal mining have been minimized and the social or external costs
Jan 1, 1975
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The Advantages And Limitations Of Computer-Based Modelling From A Decision Maker’s ViewpointBy G. H. Jardine
In future years, decision makers in the coal industry will make more and more decisions based on information from computer-based models. Whilst the use of such techniques will provide many advantages
Jan 1, 1983
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Part IV – April 1969 - Papers - A Numerical Method To Describe the Diffusion-Controlled Growth of Particles When the Diffusion Coefficient Is Composition-DependentBy C. Atkinson
A method is described for the numerical solution of the diffusion equation with a composition-dependent diffusion coefficient and applied to the radial growth of a cylinder; the radial growth of a sph
Jan 1, 1970
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The Evidence Of The Oklahoma Oil Fields On The Anticlinal TheoryBy Dorsey Hager
THE information given in the accompanying table is submitted as evidence confirming the application of the anticlinal theory and the value of geology in the Kansas and Oklahoma oil fields. The term a
Jan 2, 1917
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The Rôle Of The Igneous Rocks In The Formation Of VeinsBy J. F. Kemp
CONTENTS. [ ] INTRODUCTION. THE saying that " of all the known regions of the universe, the most unsafe to reason about is that which is under our feet,"* might well be the motto of the present
Jan 1, 1902
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PART VI - The Growth of Nitrogen-Austenite into Alloyed FerriteBy J. E. Pavlick, W. W. Mullins, H. W. Paxton
The growth of nitrogen-austenite during nitriding of large-gvained ferrite between 650" and 800°C has been studied as a functimz oJ time and nitrogen potential of the atmosphere for a variety of alloy
Jan 1, 1967
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Estimates Of The Interrelationships Between Consumer Expenditures And Natural Resource ConsumptionBy Tayler H. Bingham
Personal consumption expenditures represent roughly two-thirds of total of GNP. While these expenditures directly account for only a small portion of total natural resource consumption, they account f
Jan 1, 1977
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The Magneto-optic Method of Analysis with Particular Reference to the Detection of Elements 85 (Alabamine) and 87 (Virginium) and the Heavy Isotope of HydrogenBy Fred Allison
THE magneto-optic method of analysis had its origin in experiments1 which were designed to detect and measure a time lag in the Faraday effect and later to study this time lag as a function of the wav
Jan 1, 1932