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The Moscow Institute Urges Soviet Union To Adopt A New Plan For Mining EducationBy Roman Y. Poderny, Vladimir V. Rjevskii
In the USSR, the Moscow Institute of Radio Electronics tronics and Mining Electro-Mechanics (MIRGEM) has started what it hopes will become a nationwide movement to educate mining students in the preci
Jan 9, 1966
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Bridgeport Paper - Discussion (continued) of Mr. Rickard's paper on the origin of gold-bearing quartz of Bendigo reefs (see vol. xxii., pp. 289 and 738)Philip Argall, Denver, Colo. (communication to the Secretary) : Mr. Rickard expresses regret that I have not given more extracts " from the fresh leaves of nature's open book." The quotations use
Jan 1, 1895
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Present and Future of Underground Gas Storage ? What Has Been Done In the Appalachian AreaBy H. J. Wogner
STORAGE of natural gas in underground reservoirs is one of the most important developments in the natural gas industry in recent years. However, it is only when we consider this development together w
Jan 1, 1945
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The Petroleum Industry - Production Decreased; Crude Reserves Again Augmented; Exports at Record HighBy Basil B. Zavoico
CRUDE oil production in the United States during 1938 reached approximately 1,214,355,000 barrels, an average of 3,327,000 barrels per day, or 5 per cent below the 1937 record output of 1,279,160,000
Jan 1, 1939
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Cartels-Their Significance for American BusinessBy AIME AIME
FREE competition, long the controlling ideal of domestic trade within the United States, has had the fundamental geographical advantage of functioning in the world's largest area of unrestricted
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute of Metals - Progress in Nonferrous Metals and Alloys During the Past Few YearsBy Earle E. Schumacher, Alexander G. Souden
IN the field of physical metallurgy it is becoming increasingly difficult to keep abreast of the recent develop¬ments since the diversity of investigations is so great and the literature so voluminous
Jan 1, 1938
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Tunnel-Driving In The Alps.By W. L. Saunders
(Wilkes-Barre Meeting, June, 1911.) I. INTRODUCTION. IT is now generally admitted by experts that at least so far as rapid progress is concerned the Alpine system of tunnel-driving is superior to an
Jul 1, 1911
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The Coal Mining Industry - Production at Highest Level Since 1929 - Further Mechanization and Research NotableBy C. A. Gibbons
AFTER nine years of extremely de- pressed business, marked mostly A with red ink on the balance sheets of most coal companies and with an increasing internal competitive struggle for diminishing marke
Jan 1, 1940
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Its Everyones BusinessD EC. 20-The spirit of Christmas and good will toward men has managed a few brief appearances on the front pages, welcome relief from man's usual ill-will toward man. A couple politicos did their
Jan 1, 1950
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Coal Industry Has Biggest Peacetime YearBy Evan Evans
IT is appropriate to evaluate 1947 in review as a year of a peacetime record production of about 676,000,000 tons of coal (anthracite and bituminous), closely approaching the extraordinary wartime out
Jan 1, 1948
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Iron and SteelBy Edgar C. Bain
A NUMBER probably a sizable group of person with a dominant interest in metals maintain contact with the developments in ferrous metallurgy by reading week by week, as time permits, some four or five
Jan 1, 1941
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A Reference Standard For Base-Metal ThermocouplesBy N. E. Bonn
IT is well known that most of the materials entering into the manufacture of thermocouples are subject to variations in their thermoelectric characteristics, the chief causes of which are: differences
Jan 9, 1919
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33. Ore Deposits in the Central San Juan Mountains, ColoradoBy Thomas A. Steven
Most mineralized areas in the central San Juan Mountains, Colorado, are associated with the youngest subsidence structures in a large volcanic cauldron complex that formed concurrently with eruption o
Jan 1, 1968
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American Members Entertain JapaneseBy AIME AIME
THE climax of the various programs and entertainments in connection with the holding of the World Engineering Congress* in Tokyo in October was the complimentary dinner given by the visiting members o
Jan 1, 1930
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Iron and Steel MetallurgyBy Clyde E. Williams, JAMES L. GREGG
THIS review of the past year's progress in iron and steel metallurgy presents examples of only a few of the interesting or important accomplishments made in the United States. In the field of ir
Jan 1, 1932
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The Petroleum Industry in 1933 ? Domestic ProductionBy W. E. Wrather
CURTAILMENT of production was a matter of far more serious concern to the oil industry through 1933 than the search for new supplies of oil. The huge reserves of crude, built up during past years, ins
Jan 1, 1934
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Industrial Minerals - Ground Water in California - DiscussionBy J. F. Poland
B. C. Burgess-—Prior to hearing this paper presented at the San Francisco meeting, I travelled by car from Yuma, Ariz., across south-central California and up through the San Joaquin Valley. After hea
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Ground Water in California - DiscussionBy J. F. Poland
B. C. Burgess-—Prior to hearing this paper presented at the San Francisco meeting, I travelled by car from Yuma, Ariz., across south-central California and up through the San Joaquin Valley. After hea
Jan 1, 1951
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Biographical Notice Of James Duncan Hague.By Rossiter W. Raymond
(Chattanooga Meeting, October, INS.) THE formal outline of Mr. Hague's life and work is embraced in the following statement, chiefly based upon data furnished by him, at my request, shortly befo
Feb 1, 1909