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The Sulphide Ores of Copper. Some Results of Microscopic Study. (431c11c8-2185-4af9-9837-4390a6ba9294)Discussion of the paper of L. C. Graton and Joseph Murdoch, presented at the New York Meeting, February, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 77, May, 1913, pp. 741 to 797. THOMAS T. READ, New York, N.
Jan 10, 1913
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Copper Ores Of The New London Mine*By B. S. Butler
Introduction. THE New London copper mine, about 81, miles east of Frederick, Md., was visited by the Writers for a few hours in the spring of 1909 and the following brief notes on ore specimens colle
Jan 7, 1914
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Shear Resistance of Rock BoltsBy Charles J. Haas
The effectiveness of rock bolts in resisting shear displacement along preexisting fracture surfaces or slip planes was determined in the laboratory with full-scale bolts and large-scale shear test equ
Jan 1, 1977
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Shaft Sinking through Soft MaterialBy Edward Sayre
IN shaft sinking for coal mines, the cost item greatly influences the method adopted. This holds true especially when soft material must be traversed. The average life of a coal mine is short. This is
Jan 9, 1916
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Books For EngineersBy Reinhardt Schuhmann JR
Metallurgical Engineering Volume I, by Reinhardt Schuhmann, Jr. Addison-Wesley Press. $7.50, 390 pp., 1952. -This first volume, engineering principles, of a two volume work, is intended by the author
Jan 1, 1952
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Easton Paper - Blast-Furnace Slag CementBy J. J. Bodmer
Although the similarity between puzzolana, or trass, and blastfurnace slag, as seen by comparison of the analyses, is a well-known fact, blast-furnace slag has not been used commercially as a substitu
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Blast-Furnace Slag CementBy J. J. Bodmer
ALTHOUGH the similarity between puzzolana, or trass, and blast-furnace slag, as seen by comparison of the analyses, is a well-known fact, blast-furnace slag has not been used commercially as a substit
Jan 1, 1874
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Pyrometer Porcelains And RefractoriesBy R. W. Newcomb
THE constancy of calibration, and to a great extent the life, of a thermoelement is dependent on the suitability of the primary protecting tube in which the wires are mounted, particularly when used a
Jan 9, 1919
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Optimal Portfolio Analysis Of International Commodity Buffer Stocks: The Case For Nonferrous MetalsBy Walter C. Labys
INTRODUCTION Interest in multicommodity stabilization schemes has increased recently for several reasons, a most important one being the experienced wide swings in primary commodity prices. These p
Jan 1, 1977
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Part VIII – August 1968 - Papers - Hot Compression of Armco Iron and Silicon SteelBy J. J. Jonas, J. L. Uvira
Equipment was constructed which permitted the hot compression of 99.8 pct Armco iron and 2.8 pct Si steel at constant true strain rates of 0.05 to 1 per sec over the temperature range 600" to 1000°C.
Jan 1, 1969
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Discussion of Papers Published Prior to 1951 - The Probability Theory of Wet Ball Milling and Its Application (1950) 187, p. 1267By E. J. Roberts
F. C. Bond (Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Corp., Milwaukee) —This paper considers comminution as a first order process, with the reduction rate depending directly upon the amount of oversize material present. T
Jan 1, 1952
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New Potash Flotation Process From Testing Through Full-Scale OperationBy J. L. Huiatt, R. B. Tippin
Introduction Great Salt Lake Minerals & Chemicals Corp. (GSL), a subsidiary of Gulf Resources & Chemical Corp., is located on the east side of the Great Salt Lake, approximately 20 miles from Ogden,
Jan 1, 1980
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Report of the Library CommitteeThe Library belonging to the Institute is now administered as part of that of the United Engineering Society, the members of the Library Committee representing the Institute on the Library Board of th
Jan 1, 1929
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On the Origin of Certain Systems of Ore-bearing FracturesBy W. H. Emmons
IN 1922 Morey made a series of experiments in which he observed the cooling of a molten system containing H20, 9.1 per cent; K20, 17.3 per cent and Si02, 73.6 per cent. This system was confined in a b
Jan 1, 1934
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New York Paper - Vacuum-Fused Iron with Special Reference to Effect of Silicon (with Discussion)By T. D. Yensen
It is safe to say that of all the different materials that go to make up electrical machinery, iron is the most important. Upon its magnetic and electrical quality depends not only the efficiency of t
Jan 1, 1916
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Bentonite (CHAPTER 5)By Paul Bechtner
THE name bentonite formerly was applied solely to a peculiar clay occurring in Wyoming and South Dakota, which was distinguished from other clays by its unctuous feel when wet and the property of swel
Jan 1, 1949
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Dithiophosphate vs. Xanthate Flotation of Chalcocite and PyriteBy J. L. Huiatt, M. C. Fuerstenau, M. C. Kuhn
Dithiophosphatogen is the species responsible for flotation of pyrite when dithiophosphate is added as collector. Oxidation of collector apparently occurs by reaction with oxygen adsorbed on the pyrit
Jan 1, 1972
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Finishing Melting Temperatures Of Simple Ingot SteelsBy Henry Hibbard
This paper aims to put into useful form the information, at hand regarding temperatures of molten steels, covering all carbon contents up to 1.5 per cent., in the hope that if the assumed ideal temper
Jan 12, 1924
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The Mechanics Of Vein Formation ? DiscussionBLAMEY STEVENS, Nogales, Ariz. (written discussion *).-This subject should be approached boldly from the purely physical standpoint. There are usually many known ways of making chemical deposits of an
Jan 12, 1918
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Cincinnati Paper - The Pyrites Deposits of Louisa County, VirginiaBy W. H. Adams
Virginia, a store-house of metals, is more and more a surprise to the present generation. With her enormous available mineral wealth, worked upon steadily for over a century, exploited SUEciently to d
Jan 1, 1884