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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during the Year 1933By H. W. Miller, V. H. Wilhem
Although the year 1933 was a period of uncertainty, considerable new development was initiated, with a high percentage of favorable results, for owing to financial conditions only projects of merit we
Jan 1, 1934
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Iron and Steel Division - A New Correlation of Blast Penetration in a Blast FurnaceBy G. C. Gardner
A new correlation of blast penetration in model and operating blast furnaces is presented which overcomes objections to prevzous correlations. It is shown that the tuyere diameter is only of small imp
Jan 1, 1961
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Copper Refining at the Great Falls Reduction Department of the Anaconda CompanyBy Roland J. Lapee
A history of the progress made in copper refining in Montana is presented. The casting furnaces and the newly rebuilt electrolytic refinery are descmbed and operating details are given. Experiences w
Jan 1, 1962
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Technical Notes - Gas Slippage and Permeability MeasurementsBy Paul F. Fulton, Robert K. Estes
INTRODUCTION Relative permeabilities are factual data necessary to any prediction of reservoir production behavior. One important problem in determining relative permeabilities of porous media to g
Jan 1, 1957
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Bridgeport Paper - The Phosphates of TennesseeBy Lytle Brown, Thomas C. Meadows
The rock now known to almost every Middle Tennessee farmer as " phosphate," was but recently recognized as such. The existence of a stratum of black siliceous rock in the hills surrounding the Nashvil
Jan 1, 1895
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The Acid Bessemer ProcessBy Richard McCaffery
THIS paper considers certain aspects of the acid Bessemer process, particularly in its relations to the duplex process-that combination in which the pig iron is first desiliconized and decarburized in
Jan 8, 1920
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Review of the MonthWITH the economic situation of the world what it is, we may expect important events in every month of 1922, and January showed us some-what of the nature of things that will happen. The Germans announ
Jan 2, 1922
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The Hecla Flotation PlantBy W. L. Zeigler
THE tailing from the gravity concentration plant of the Hecla Mining Co., Gem, Idaho, was former-ly loaded into railroad cars to be used for ballast, highway surfacing material, or concrete work, or d
Jan 8, 1927
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Separation of Yttrium and Rare-Earth Nitrates with the Solvent Extraction System-Tri-N-Butylamine-3 Methyl-2-ButanoneBy G. T. Engel, W. G. Gruzensky
Jan 1, 1960
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Petroliferous Rocks In Serra Da BalizaBy Euzebio De Oliveira
ONE of a recent batch of samples from the Serra da Baliza, in the state of Parana, Brazil, contained asphalt and a dark heavy oil; and workmen on the railway from Porto União to Uruguay discovered asp
Jan 4, 1921
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Successful Application of the Gravitational-Inertial ClassifierCrushed limestone is now being "de-dusted" at the Warner Co. plant in Bellefonte, Pa., by a new high-efficiency classifier utilizing aerodynamic principles not previously employed in classifiers. Crus
Jan 11, 1960
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The Temperature Range Of Martensite FormationBy H. M. Stewart, R. A. Grange
MANY steel parts may crack if quenched directly into a bath near room temperature, but not if quenched at a temperature just above the range where martensite forms and then allowed to cool slowly to r
Jan 1, 1946
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Iron and Steel - The Effect of Annealing upon the Hardness of Cold-worked Ingot IronBy Charles Y. Clayton
A study of the literature shows that the greater part of research work on annealing of cold-worked iron has been for the purpose of studying the effect on grain-size and properties other than hardness
Jan 1, 1926
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Supply Trucks at the Copper QueenBy AIME AIME
FOR the development of a mine, a shaft of small cross-section is usually sunk, of no larger size than is absolutely necessary. After the mine has been developed and put on a production basis it is a c
Jan 1, 1930
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PART IV - Communications - The Influence of Deformation Velocity on the Tensile Rupture Ductility of Strain-Aged SteelBy A. Hansson, G. E. Tardiff
WHILE it is generally known that cold-worked low-and medium-carbon steels exhibit substantial increases in tensile rupture ductility with increased deformation velocity172 (up to the von Karman limit)
Jan 1, 1968
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Policy of the American Petroleum InstituteAT the Tulsa meeting of the A. P. I., the following reso-lutions, expressive of the policy of that organization, were among those adopted: RESOLVED, That we endorse the conclusion of the Federal Oil
Jan 1, 1927
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Geology of the Getchell MineBy Roy Hardy
THE Getchell mine is a comparatively recent discovery in the old Potosi mining district, Humboldt County, Nevada, a district organized in the seventies and eighties, in which some prospecting was done
Jan 1, 1940
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Experience With The Habegger MoleBy Hans W. Brodbeck
The main problem in tunneling without the use of explosives lies in the development of tools capable of continuous mechanical destruction of rock, resulting in a fragmentation which lends itself to a
Jan 1, 1970
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Pittsburg Paper - The Effect of Additions of Titaniferous to Phosphoric Iron-Ores in the Blast- FurnaceBy Auguste J. Rossi
As is well known, practically all the phosphorus of the ironores smelted in the blast-furnace passes into the pig-metal, increasing its fluidity, but diminishing its strength to such an extent that, i
Jan 1, 1897
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Gases Which Occur in Metal MinesBy D. Harrington
WHEN the word gas is mentioned in connection with mining, almost invariably it is inferred that the explosive gas, methane, is in mind and that it must refer to coal mining. While it is true that meth
Jan 1, 1930