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Exploration Methods and Technique - An OverviewBy The Staff of Dames & Moore
Five factors are required for the formation of uranium deposits: a source, transporting medium, host, trap, and preservation. Locating and evaluating uranium deposits requires ail integration of metho
Jan 10, 1978
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The Rule Governing The Weight Of The Clapper, Depending On The Sizes Of The Bells.JUST as I have told you that it is impossible to give an exact rule for the bell scale, so I say the same concerning the clappers. Yet, if one wishes the bell to sound well, it is necessary that it ha
Jan 1, 1942
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Enlarging The Worth Of The Worker And The Perspective Of The EmployerBy J. Parke Channing
THESE days of great industrial and social problems in America produce many suggested solutions and great changes. The practical engineer and employer of labor views these problems differently from the
Jan 3, 1915
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Enlarging The Worth. Of The Worker And The Perspective Of The Employer - 1915By J. PARK
Discussion of the paper of J. PARSE CHANNING, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 99, March, 1915, pp. 529 to 538. FRED H. RINDGE, JR., * New York, N. Y.-It
Jan 5, 1915
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The Scientist and the Artist in the Machine AgeIN comparing the living conditions of the worker or peasant of the past with those existing today, his-torians might point out many strange contrasts. From the Doomsday Book we learn that at the time
Jan 11, 1927
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Rock In The Box - The Start Of The Fall?By Bruce A. Kennedy
In recent months, public hearings held by the Senate Subcommittee on Minerals, Materials and Fuels on the Stillwater copper-nickel complex in Montana have been reviewed at great length in the press. A
Jan 1, 1971
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The Significance Of The Mineral Industries In The EconomyBy Charles White Merrill
Mankind's progress is measured in minerals. Man's emergence from prehistory is marked by passage through a Stone Age and a Bronze Age and into the present era, sometimes called the Iron Age
Jan 1, 1959
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The Engineer Saves-The Tax Collector Takes the SavingsBy HARRY H. SMITH
IT IS my understanding that, speaking broadly, the function of the engineering profession is to find how to do the thing required better for less money. Mechanical engineers, mining engineers, and the
Jan 1, 1931
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Finland’s Outokumpu Mine – The Mine –The Shaft – The MillBy V. Vahatalo, E. Hakapaa, H. Tanner
Recently modernized, the surface plant of the Outokumpu mine in Finland incorporates a number of ideas meriting close scrutiny from this side of the Atlantic. The mining methods make extensive use of
Jul 1, 1955
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The Chinese On The Rand.By T. Lane Carter
BEFORE describing the experience with the Chinese on the Rand and the work they have accomplished, it will be necessary, sary, first, to give a brief account of labor-conditions in the Transvaal since
Sep 1, 1908
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The Opportunity of the EngineerBy PHILIP N. MOORE
IT is a pleasure to realize even at that day the dignity of the engineer's calling was upheld. May I also add my firm belief that today there be many engineers who will qualify to the specificati
Jan 1, 1926
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The Nucleation Of The SolidBy D. Turnbull, J. H. Hollomon
IN the most general sense, solidification refers to the formation of crystalline material from either a gas or a liquid. However, in this symposium, only the formation of crystals from liquids will be
Jan 1, 1951
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The Exploration Of The SouthwestThe early Spanish adventurers found but little gold or silver on the American mainland, and the aborigines in the country that is now the United States were not as submissive as those of the West Indi
Jan 1, 1932
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The Engineer and the FederatedAT THE dinner at the Cosmos Club in Washington, tendered to Herbert Hoover on Jan. 5, on the occasion of his retirement from the presidency of the Federated American Engineering Societies, he made an
Jan 3, 1922
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The Turn Of The CenturyTHE turn of the century was marked by the appearance of a series of greatly important pieces of research that became the foundations of modern physical metallurgy. It is, of course, some- what mislead
Jan 1, 1948
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The Battle of the MetalsBy Percy W. Bidwell
THE statisticians had defeated Germany months before she invaded Poland. With batteries of adding machines they had proved that she was suffering from serious deficiencies in critical food- stuffs and
Jan 1, 1940
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The Duties of the EngineerIN speaking, on the subject, "Engineer-Citizens," at the Lehigh Valley Mineral Industries Conference dinner, on April 26, at Easton, Pa., George Otis Smith, Director of the United States Geological Su
Jan 5, 1928
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The End Of The CenturyTHE decades immediately before and after the end of the nineteenth century (1890-1910) were a period of increased activity in mineral industry education. One reason for this, undoubtedly, was the rapi
Jan 1, 1941
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The Development Of The NorthwestIn 1803 the purchase of the immense territory called the province of Louisiana wm arranged between Thomas Jefferson, President of the United States, and Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul of France. Thi
Jan 1, 1932
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The Greening of the OquirrhsBy Christine Alexander
Twenty years ago, the northern Oquirrh Mountains overlooking Salt Lake City were bare. Heavy logging and overgrazing combined with erosion and uncontrolled forest fires had severely denuded the mounta
Jan 10, 1975