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San Francisco Paper - Factors Controlling the Capacity of Rock Crushers (with Discussion)By Ernest A. Hersam
The rate of output of a rock crusher is based upon a certain space relation, the calculation requiring that the size and position of the jaws, the principle of motion, and the speed of the machine be
Jan 1, 1923
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Papers - Magnetic Methods - Practical Geomagnetic Exploration with the Hotchkiss Superdip (With Discussion)By Noel H. Stearn
To the successful functioning of the geomagnetic method of exploration in engineering and geological practice there are two prime prerequisites : the measurability and the interpretability of signific
Jan 1, 1932
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Virginia Beach Paper - Benjamin Huntsman, of Sheffield, the Inventor of Crucible SteelBy R. A. Hadfield
The present tribute to a great pioneer in the steel industry, with the accompanying remarks upon the town of Sheffield, which has remained to this day what his invention made it, an important center o
Jan 1, 1895
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Possible Existence of Deep-seated Oil Deposits on the Gulf Coast-DiscussionG. SHERBURNE ROGERS,* Washington, D. C. (written discussion?).- We are indebted to Captain Lucas for an interesting contribution to the literature of the salt-dome oil fields, and especially for his
Jan 10, 1918
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New York Paper - Analysis of Furnace Gases-Description of the Orsat ApparatusBy Thomas Egleston
All industrial establishments whose operations depend upon chemical reactions use gases. In the simplest case the oxygen of the atmosphere, heated or not, as the case may be, is used, and in other cas
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The Diamond Drill for Deep Boring, Compared With Other Systems of BoringBy Oswald J. Heinrich
THE great improvements which have been made in late years in the different systems and instruments used to perforate the crust of the earth for purposes of testing and exploring for mineral resources
Jan 1, 1874
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Industrial Minerals - Mining and Concentrating Spodumene in the Black Hills, South DakotaBy Gerald A. Munson, Fremont F. Clarke
DURING recent years the use of lithium has expanded greatly in industrial, chemical, and metallurgical fields, while at the same time modernized methods of mining and refining lithium have increased p
Jan 1, 1956
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The Stability Of Natural And Man-Made Slopes In Soil And RockBy H. Q. Golder
With the development of open-pit mines of ever increasing depth, the stability of the pit slopes in soil and rock is of growing economic importance. How is it, considering the newness of the problem
Jan 1, 1972
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Institute of Metals Division - The CsCl-Type Ordered Structure in VMn (TN)By J. B. Darby
In an investigation of various equiatomic alloys of transition elements, Dwightl did not find evidence for the CsC1-type ordered structure in VMn. More recently waterstrat2 has reported the occurrence
Jan 1, 1963
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The Washing Of Pittsburgh Coking Coals And Results Obtained On Blast FurnacesBy C. D. King
THE key to maximum production of ingots for the war effort is maximum production of pig iron. For any given furnace and ore, the most important single influence on blast-furnace production is the qual
Jan 1, 1944
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Address of Welcome to the U. S. National Museum, Washington, D. C.By DR. RICHARD RATHBUN
ON behalf of the Regents and the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, it gives me great pleasure to welcome you to the National Museum; but it is to your own museum, since it belongs to you in co
Jul 1, 1905
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PART IV - Communications - Sampling Error in the of Grain-Edge Length EstimationBy J. E. Hilliard
AS is well-known, the length per unit volume, Lv, of any lineal feature (such as grain edges in a polycrys-talline specimen) can be estimated from a count of the number of point intersections with a r
Jan 1, 1967
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Minerals Beneficiation - An Investigation of the Rheological Properties of Solid-Liquid SystemsBy L. W. Pommier, F. B. Brien
The Rheological properties of pulps are non-Newtonian in character and more than one viscosity parameter is necessary to describe their behavior, therefore, the single term 'apparent viscosity&ap
Jan 1, 1968
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Part I – January 1968 - Communications - The Variation of Ingot Structure with CompositionBy G. S. Coe, G. F. Bolling
The columnar-to-equiaxed transition (CET) has often been studied as a function of concentration, C, temperature gradient in the melt, G, and rate of solidification, R. Although it may not be immediat
Jan 1, 1969
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Pittsburg International Session October, 1890 Paper - On the Darby Process of RecarburizationBy A. Thielen
In experiments for the production of steel the principal problem has always been the introduction into, or removal from, the iron of a definite quantity of carbon. Although the solution of this proble
Jan 1, 1891
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History Of Pumping At The Chief Consolidated Mine, Eureka, Juab County, UtahBy John G. Hall
The pumping operations at the Chief mine have been unique in the respect that for many years the entire flow of water into the mine has been disposed of by pumping into natural underground " caverns"
Jan 1, 1949
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Comparison of Methods for the Determination of Iron and Phosphorus in -SteelBy Messrs. von Jonstorff
Continued Discussion of the Paper of Messrs. von Jonstorff, Blair, Dillner and Stead, presented at the New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, October, 1904.* (Bethlehem Meeting, February,
Mar 1, 1906
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Factors to be Considered for Increasing the Extraction of Underground Potash DepositsBy Hamish D. S. Miller
Currently the underground potash mines in Canada extract about 40% of the available ore, leaving the other 60% behind in the form of stabilizing pillars. The presence of water in the overlying formati
Jan 1, 1983
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Part X – October 1968 - Papers - Ternary Compounds with the Fe2P-Type StructureBy J. W. Downey, A. E. Dwight, M. H. Mueller, H. Knott, R. A. Conner
Sixty new ternary equiatomic compounds are reported with a hexagonal crystal structure that is isostructural with or very similar to Fe2P, D3h-P62m. HoNiAl is a typical example, with a, = 6.9893 ± 0
Jan 1, 1969
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Part III – March 1968 - Papers - Silica Films by the Oxidation of SilaneBy J. R. Szedon, T. L. Chu, G. A. Gruber
Amorphous adherent filnzs of silicon dioxide have been deposited on silicon substrates by the oxidation of silane at temperatures ranging from 650 to 1050C. Various diluents (argon, nitrogen, hydrog
Jan 1, 1969