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Copper Smelter Design For The 70'sBy Clint L. Milliken
The smelter is often considered the flywheel of the copper industry. No other unit can produce such a uniform product from so many starting materials. Direct-smelting ore, concentrate, precipitate, re
Jan 1, 1971
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Papers - The Gold-aluminum System (With Discussion)By Arthur S. Coffinberry, Ralph Hultgren
We have studied the gold-aluminum system by X-ray diffraction and by the microscope over the entire range of composition for temperatures between 300° and 500° C. Results obtained are shown in Fig. 1,
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - The Gold-aluminum System (With Discussion)By Arthur S. Coffinberry, Ralph Hultgren
We have studied the gold-aluminum system by X-ray diffraction and by the microscope over the entire range of composition for temperatures between 300° and 500° C. Results obtained are shown in Fig. 1,
Jan 1, 1938
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Drilling The Cane Creek No. 2 ShaftBy K. J. Kutz, F. A. Nice
Drilling of the second shaft at Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.'s Cane Creek potash operation southwest of Moab, Utah, is perhaps the largest undertaking ever made by private industry in the field of rota
Jan 9, 1968
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New York Paper - The Wilfley Table, IIBy Robert H. Richards
My first paper, read at the Cobalt Meeting of the Institute,' July, 1907, dealt with the behavior of a small Wilfley table when collceiltrating galena from quartz, the table being fed with natura
Jan 1, 1909
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Cleaning Coal by the Simon-Carves ProcessBy A. C. Dittrick
THE Simon-Carves washer, originally known as the Baum jig washer, was first built in Europe about 1892. It was probably the first washer to use intermittent pressure of air on water in one part of the
Jan 1, 1935
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Safeguarding The Use Of Electricity In MinesBy H. H. Clark
ELECTRICITY must be safeguarded everywhere that it is used. The conditions that exist underground make the use of safeguards more essential there than almost anywhere else. Electric Shock Electric s
Jan 4, 1914
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The Claiborne Group and its Remarkable FossilsBy P. H. Mell
THE little village, from which this formation receives its name, is situated on a bluff of the Alabama River, 175 feet above water level. This bluff is a portion of high table land that begins in the
Jan 1, 1880
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Young Mining Engineer in the Coal IndustryBy M. D. Cooper
UNDERGRADUATES in mining engineering may be prepared for work by giving them sound instruction in the courses generally considered essential to the profession. The industry is not deeply concerned abo
Jan 1, 1950
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Scope Of The Light-Weight Aggregates IndustryBy H. Herbert Hughes
THE trend in modern building construction is definitely toward the use of weight-reducing materials. The basic advantage of lighter structural weight is obvious; reduction of dead load with retention
Jan 1, 1931
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Evaluating The Performance Of A Cleaning UnitBy J. Visman
FOR more than 25 years evaluations of coal cleaning units have appeared in many publications, and during this time considerable progress has been made in developing the theory and techniques of calcul
Jan 10, 1954
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Applications Of The Electron Microscope In MetallurgyBy V. K. Zworykin
THROUGHOUT its development the science of electronics, like so many other branches of science and industry, has been indebted to the metallurgist. Metallurgy has provided the electronic engineer with
Jan 1, 1943
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Practice at the Company's Utah Metal MinesBy B. E. Grant
THE major metal mine operations of the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company in Utah are in the Bingham area. The Company also owns and operates metal mines in the Ophir district, twelve
Jan 1, 1948
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The Clinton Iron-Ore Deposits In Alabama.By ERNEST F. . SURCEIARD
work have been published from time to time by the Survey.' A detailed report on the Birmingham district, with maps, has been completed, and will be published within the next year." In the follow
Nov 1, 1908
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Chicago Paper - The Chicago Main Drainage ChannelBy J. F. Lewis
Much has been written on this great engineering work, principally from the civil engineer's stand-point. In presenting the subject to the Institute, it seems necessary to include something of geo
Jan 1, 1898
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Progress in the Technology of Oil ProductionBy F. B. Plummer
PERHAPS the greatest progress made in the technical methods of oil production during the last year has been in handling gas from the new fields that yield light distillate fractions. At least sixteen
Jan 1, 1940
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The Limits Of Mining Under Heavy WashBy Douglas Bunting
THE first presentation of this paper was before the Pennsylvania Anthracite Section of the Institute in May, 1914, after which a committee was selected to verify and add to the data contained in the o
Jan 1, 1915
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Some Physical Aspects of the Silicosis ProblemBy A. J. Lanza
IN view of the immense amount of attention that silicosis has received in this country in the past few years, it is timely to review the status of the silicosis problem at present. Who gets silicosis
Jan 1, 1937
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New York Paper - The Illinois Oil FieldsBy H. A. Wheeler
. Page History.................................533 Location .........:.....................536 Geology...............................539 Description of the Eastern Field ... :..................543
Jan 1, 1915
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Phosphate Activities of the Tennessee Valley AuthorityBy Arthur M. Miller
FROM the time of its establishment in 1933, the Tennessee Valley Authority has been active in the field of phosphates. Under the T.V.A. Act it has a broad Congressional mandate to guide a unified deve
Jan 1, 1944