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Refractories (2d026bd8-9e6c-492b-be90-0169ad20abb7)By Harry M. Mikami
Refractories are heat-resistant, generally nonmetallic materials used as the linings of furnaces or high temperature vessels in the steel, iron, nonferrous metals, glass, cement, lime, ceramic, chemic
Jan 1, 1976
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Part II - Papers - Observations of Substructures in Explosively Deformed and Annealed Beta BrassBy Norman Brown, J. V. Rinnovatore
Substructures in explosively deformed and annealed ß brass have been examined by electron microscopy. In the explosively deformed condition, the structure contains a large density of straight screw ty
Jan 1, 1968
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Institute of Metals Discusses Varied TopicsBy T. A. Wright
THE-Institute of Metals Division opened on Tuesday afternoon with Wheeler P. Davey as chairman and G. E. Edmunds as vice-chairman. Four papers were on the program, two being of a fundamental character
Jan 1, 1935
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Hydraulicking of Florida Phosphate RockBy W. J. Rude
LARGEST of the known commercial deposits of pebble phosphate are those found in Polk County, Florida. The phosphate bed, commonly known as the matrix, will consistently average 6 to 9 ft. in depth, an
Jan 1, 1941
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Poland and Its Mineral WealthBy AIME AIME
MINERALS and mineral resources are recognized as one of the things that nations are prone to quarrel about. The territory that was arbitrarily incorporated into the Polish Republic after the World War
Jan 1, 1939
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New Mineral Dressing Curriculum and Laboratories at M.I.T.By A. M. Gaudin
CHANGES in industrial practice, in plant design, and in research methods which are so clearly to be seen on every hand, have affected the mineral industry as well as others. In particular, ore dressin
Jan 1, 1942
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Magnetite Mining And MillingBy J. R. Linney
Demand for eastern magnetite in 1948 necessitated practically all eastern magnetite industries to operate on a six-day week, with the result that over 11,000,000 long tons of crude ore were mined, and
Jan 1, 1949
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Gold Stocks Not AlarmingBy AIME AIME
EDWIN W. KEMMERER, professor of international finance at Princeton, in a speech before a banking conference at Urbana, Ill., on Nov. 26, stated that the increase in the store of gold held by the Unite
Jan 1, 1941
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Some Aspects Of Mechanical Coal Cleaning In UtahBy Carl S. Westerberg
Coal preparation practice and trends follow, among other factors, production trends in any given area. Considering an area the size of a state, some broad predictions may be made after a review of the
Jan 1, 1949
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Magnesium-Its Sources, Methods of Reduction, and Commercial ApplicationBy Paul D. V. Manning
MAGNESIUM is an exceedingly strategic material but the importance of its production at the time this war started was not realized. Our Government then suddenly became much alive to the need of a treme
Jan 1, 1943
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Robert W. Thomas, Director, A.I.M.E.By AIME AIME
OUR new Director from the 15th District is Robert W. Thomas; of Ray, Ariz., general manager of the Ray Mines division, Kennecott Copper Corp. In electing him to this office his fellow engineers pay tr
Jan 1, 1944
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Well Drilling FluidsBy Stanley J. LeFond, Neal Davis
Drilling an oil well or most other types of drilling or coring is no longer a simple and uncomplicated operation. Drilling today at depths which exceed 30,000 ft is hazardous and requires personnel wi
Jan 1, 1975
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Oil Flotations -- Spherical AgglomerationBy I. E. Puddington
The property of surface tension in liquids is said to have been known to Leonardo de Vinci in about 1500. Approximately'300 years later Thomas Young and others provided the ground rules relating
Jan 1, 1979
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Pyrometer Porcelains and Refractories - DiscussionA. 0. ASHMAN, Palmerton, Pa. (written discussion *.).-Mr. Newcomb's paper has interested me greatly, as I have had numerous experiences along this line. I do not think enough emphasis can be put
Jan 12, 1919
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StauroliteBy Robert B. Fulton
Staurolite, an iron aluminum silicate mineral, is used industrially as the source of aluminum in portland cement manufacture in areas where the aluminum constituent is not economically available from
Jan 1, 1975
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Tin : An Ideal Pyrometric SubstanceBy E. F. Northrup
THESE brief notes respecting the properties of pure tin that make it useful as a pyrometric substance summarize information gathered by the writer In an extensive experimental investigation on the ele
Jan 8, 1919
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Molybdenum SteelsBy John Mathews
IT is twenty years since the writer made his first molybdenum steels and others were making them commercially five years earlier but the prevailing opinion seems to be that molybdenum steels are new;
Jan 2, 1921
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Mexican Paper - An Adobe Reverberatory FurnaceBy John Gross
The building of reverberatory furnaces (Fortschaufelungsofen) where ordinary brick, fire-brick and iron are comparatively cheap, is quite a different matter from the building of such furnaces in isola
Jan 1, 1902
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Mine FinanceBy Samuel Dolbear
PUBLIC discussions of mine finance in the tech-nical press have been confined mainly to methods of providing funds for the development of pros-pects or other mining operations which have not reached t
Jan 2, 1927
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Symposia - Symposium on Creep of Nonferrous Metals and Alloys - Creep Characteristics of a Phosphorized Copper - DiscussionBy H. l. Burghoff, A. I. Blank
J. J. Kanter.*—The authors of this paper have demonstrated that at 500°F their alloy will elongate, under appropriately adjusted stress, one or two per cent over a period of 6000 hr. Then they show th
Jan 1, 1945