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The Electrostatic Separation Of Several Industrial MineralsBy Oliver C. Ralston, Foster Fraas
INTRODUCTION ELECTROSTATIC methods of separation are used only when some peculiar advantage is gained. Such cases are minerals that are not separable by differences in specific gravity or magnetic
Jan 1, 1947
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Wartime Changes In The Secondary Metals IndustryBy Frederic H. Wright
The secondary metals industry might well be defined as the group of remelters, smelters, refiners, and manufacturers that convert scrap metals or residues to commercial forms. In this industry, scrap
Jan 1, 1943
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The Gay-lussac Method Of Silver Determination.By Frederic Dewey
(New York Meeting, February, 1913) This old and well-known method of determining, silver is, in bullion work, so far superior to the furnace-assay that it is looked upon with reverential awe by many,
Jan 4, 1913
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Florida Paper - The Florida Rock-Phosphate DepositsBy G. M. Wells
A view of the map of Floridat shows the phosphate-deposits to lie on the western side of the State, extending southward over
Jan 1, 1896
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Geophysics - Case History of the Juniper ProspectBy S. H. Ward, R. A. Barker
THE Juniper Prospect is in Carleton County, N. B., at approximately 46" 31' north latitude, 67" 20' west longitude. During the summer of 1955 an area in west-central New Brunswick was sel
Jan 1, 1959
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Cleveland Paper - The World's Product of SilverBy R. W. Raymond
Recent literary labors have led me to the compilation of the following tables and estimates, which may possess interest for my colleagues in the Institute, and which are here submitted without comment
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Buffalo Paper - The Kytchtym Medal (Discussion, 848)By Persifor Frazer
From the easternmost point reached by the Ural excursion of the VIIth International Geological Congress (the city of Tschéliabinsk, a little more than 30' of longitude east of St.
Jan 1, 1899
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Getting the Most From Your Button BitsPercussion drilling with tungsten carbide insert button bits ranks among the most significant advances in both underground and surface drilling in medium and hard rock formations. Getting top performa
Jan 8, 1978
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The Hydro-Electrolytic Treatment Of Copper Ores*By Robert Goodrich
EXPERIMENTS ON A PORPHYRY COPPER ORE FROM BISBEE, ARIZ. THIS research was done partly in the non-ferrous laboratory of the Department of Metallurgy of Columbia University, under the direction of Dr.
Jan 8, 1915
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Tin Deposit of the Monserrat Mine, BoliviaBy Russell Gibson, F. S. Turneaure
The tin deposit of Monserrat, Bolivia, consists of one major vein 1600 m in length. The ore is unusual because of the notable quantity of teallite, even though cassiterite is the principal tin mineral
Jan 10, 1950
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Open Pit Mining - The Eastern United StatesBy John G. Hall
MANY millions of tons of raw materials are removed each year from open pit mines in the eastern U. S. These materials are used by industry to produce aluminum, asbestos, barite products, building ston
Jan 2, 1957
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The Method Of Making Common Parting Acid.IF you wish to make the acid that is vulgarly called common aqua fortis,* for parting gold from silver, you must first provide as many cucurbits and alembics, receivers, and materials as you wish, and
Jan 1, 1942
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Ottawa Paper - The Davis-Colby Ore-RoasterBy Sterling G. Valentine
The annual .use of large quantities of sulphurous iron-ores (over 1,500,000 tons in the United States) has led to a search for the best methods of desulphurization, in order to make this material more
Jan 1, 1890
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Operational Studies in the Pennsylvania Slate IndustryBy W. F. Mullen
WITH few exceptions, unit operations in the Pennsylvania slate industry in 1950 did not differ appreciably from production methods described by Behre1 and Bowles 2-4 several decades ago. Many traditio
Jan 12, 1951
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Milling Practice At The Lavender Pit ConcentratorBy H. K. Martin
IN September 1954 the Lavender pit concentrator at Lowell, Ariz., began treating low grade porphyry copper ore from the nearby Lavender mine. Nominal capacity of the mill is 12,000 tpd, but production
Jan 11, 1957
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Block Caving Practice At The Jeffrey MineBLOCK CAVING HAS BEEN DEVELOPED to a high degree of efficiency in the last two decades and more particularly since World War II. At the Jeffrey mine of Canadian Johns-Manville Co., in the Eastern Town
Jan 5, 1954
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Nature Of The Chromium-Iron-Carbon DiagramBy Marcus Grossmann
THIS paper offers for consideration certain somewhat radical modifications in the iron-carbon diagram, these modifications being the result of the presence of notable amounts of alloying elements. Whe
Jan 12, 1926
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Clyde Williams ? President of the AIME, 1947By Clyde Williams
A MAN who is a first-class metallurgist, engineer, and scientist and an outstanding organizer, administrator, and executive and who, at the same time, has an innate ability to "make friends and influe
Jan 1, 1947
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The Relationship Of Production Geology To ExplorationBy S. P. Brown, J. E. Worthington
Increasingly, exploration geology seems to be growing into a practice overly separated from production geology, yet the eventual purpose of exploration is a producing mine. To help in the search for n
Jan 1, 1984
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The Appraisal of Coal Land for TaxationBy H. M. Chance
Within the last 10 years the subject of mine taxation in its relation to coal-mining interests has come to have growing importance, not only to those engaged in the mining of coal, but also to the own
Jan 1, 1915