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Observations on Control of the Coal Dust Explosion Hazard in European MinesBy D. S. Kingery, D. W. Mitchell
Experience in Europe indicates that the control of dust production and dissemination by water or foam systems is not successful except during undercutting. Cybulski, Dawes, and DeBraaf-respectively Di
Jan 7, 1964
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Low-Temperature Carbonization of Lignite and Noncoking Coals in the Entrained StateBy E. O. Wagner, V. F. Parry, W. S. Landers
Following investigations by the Denver Bureau of Mines on drying fine coal in the entrained state, Texas Power & Light Co. employed the fluidized technique to upgrade Texas lignite for use in power pl
Jan 1, 1956
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Relations between Government Surveys and the Mining Industry - Public Geological Surveys and Geological EducationBy M. N. Short
It is almost self-evident that the student of geology depends for his education in geology only in small measure upon his own observation. His chief sources of information are lectures and personal in
Jan 1, 1935
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Relations between Government Surveys and the Mining Industry - Public Geological Surveys and Geological EducationBy M. N. Short
It is almost self-evident that the student of geology depends for his education in geology only in small measure upon his own observation. His chief sources of information are lectures and personal in
Jan 1, 1935
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New York Paper - February, 1918 - The Effect of the Presence of a Small Amount of Copper in Medium-carbon Steel (with Discussion)By Arch. B. Johnston, Carle R. Hayward
The effect of copper on steel has been studied by numerous investigators. Before modern testing methods had been developed, blacksmiths noted red shortness in iron, the cause for which was ascribed to
Jan 1, 1918
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Part X - The 1967 Howe Memorial Lecture – Iron and Steel Division - Equilibrium Studies on the Systems ZrCr2-H2, ZrV2-H2, and ZrMo2-H, Between 0° and 900°CBy E. A. Gulbransen, A. Pebler
Pressure-composition isotherms have been determinedfor the systems ZrMo2 -H2 between 0" and 900°C at hydrogen pressures between 10-4 and 760 Torr. Tkese studies plus X-ray diffraction analyses of sel
Jan 1, 1968
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Calculation of Linear Waterflood Behavior Including the Effects of Capillary PressureBy R. J. Wagner, Jim Douglas Jr., P. M. Blair
The calculation of the behavior of an oil reservoir during a water flood has long been an important problem to reservoir engineers. Buckley and Leverett derived the differential equation which describ
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Institute of Metals Division - Isothermal Mode of the Martensitic TransformationBy E. S. Machlin, Morris Cohen
The isothermal formation of martensite in a 71 pct Fe, 29 pct Ni alloy is found to take place mainly by the nucleation of new plates rather than by the growth of existing ones, and is dependent on the
Jan 1, 1953
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Coal - Productivity in Mining Pitching Seams of the Canadian RockiesBy H. Wilton Clark
VARYING in thickness and in number from place to place, coal seams in the Canadian Rockies also range in pitch from nearly horizontal to vertical, sometimes with overturns. Over the entire coal-bearin
Jan 1, 1955
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Reservoir Engineering – General - Application of Statistics to the Analysis of Production Decline DataBy W. W. Yankie, A. T. Chatas
This paper is written as a discussion of the paper, "Buckling of Tubing in Pumping Wells, Its Effects and Means for Controlling It" by Arthur Lubinski and K. A. Blenkarn, which war published in the Ma
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Miscellaneous Underground Methods - Opening the Mather Mine (T.P. 1781, Mining Tech., Jan. 1945)By C. W. Allen, L. C. Moore
The Mather mine, of the Negaunee Mine Co., is within the limits of the City of Ishpeming. on the Marquette iron range in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It is named for William G. Mather, who has ser
Jan 1, 1946
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Improvements In Mining Practice In The Butte District (93328285-c4a6-45a8-ae16-91d7cd08a50d)By E. R. Borcherdt
METHODS and equipment are subject to study in the Butte district at all times in order that advantage may be taken of any new developments that might serve to increase efficiency and lower costs. Det
Jan 1, 1941
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Purity on Grain Growth in AluminumBy T. A. El-Bassyouni, Paul Gordon
Grain-gvowth data in zone-refined aluminum and in dilute alloys of copper with this aluminum have been obtained. The amounts of copper added were from 4 to 400 at. ppm. It was found that in both the u
Jan 1, 1965
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Geophysics - Uses and Limitations of the Airborne Magnetic GradiometerBy Milton Glicken
THE airborne geophysicist is a busy man these days. In his plane he may have the airborne magnetometer, the airborne scintillation counter, and the airborne electromagnetic surveying system. Each of t
Jan 1, 1956
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Montreal (Annual) Paper - The Phosphate Mines of Canada (See Discussion p. 1000)By H. B. Small
The Ottawa river, the northeastern boundary of the Province of Ontario, and the dividing line between the latter and the Province of Quebec, has long been famous for the rafts of timber floated over i
Jan 1, 1893
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Minerals Beneficiation - On the Normal Interaction Between Adsorbed Species and Adsorbing SurfaceBy J. M. Cases
Study of the normal interaction between flotation collectors and the silicates through measurement of the electrokinetic potential carried out by the streaming potential and flotation recovery methods
Jan 1, 1971
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Extractive Metallurgy In The Years Ahead - New Processes To Meet New ProblemsBy H. H. Kellogg
An invitation to address you on the occasion of the one-hundredth anniversary of AIME represents an honor, a challenge and an opportunity: an honor that you judge me worthy; a challenge that I present
Jan 1, 1971
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Theory, Scale-Up, And Operating Variables Of The Peterson Top Feed ReservoirBy R. J. Piros, Brusenback, D. A. Dahlstrom
DEWATERING fine coal has been a serious problem to many operators who desired to wet-wash finer sizes and maintain high recovery. Centrifugal driers have become popular for this purpose for sizes betw
Jan 1, 1952
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New York Paper - Potash as Byproduct from the Blast Furnace (with Discussion)By R. J. Wysor
Since the outbreak of the European war, few problems of raw-material supply have commanded more nation-wide attention than potash. It is well known that before the war the domestic production of potas
Jan 1, 1917
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Experiments On The Flow of Sand And Water Through SpigotsBy R. H. Richards
IN nearly all ore-dressing operations it is a common practice to discharge mixtures of fine ore and water through spigots; for example, from classifier pockets, from jig hutches, from settling tanks,
Jan 1, 1915