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The National Engineering Societies In National ServiceCOUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE W: S. GIFFORD, Director, GROSVENOR B. CLARKSON, Secretary. The Council of National Defense The Advisory Commission NEWTON D. BAKER, DANIEL WILLARD, Chairman, Secre
Jan 6, 1917
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Biographical Notice - Died in Service - William HagueLieutenant Gorman was born in Ottawa, Canada, in 1888, and after preliminary education at Ottawa University and the Ottawa Collegiate Institute, he graduated from McGill University in 1913, as a minin
Jan 1, 1920
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Drilling Technology - Drilling Fluid Filter Loss at High Temperatures and PressuresBy F. W. Schremp, V. L. Johnson
This paper discusses the results obtained from high temperature, high pressure filter loss studies in which field samples of clay-water, emulsion, and oil base fluids were used. High temperature, high
Jan 1, 1952
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Mechanical Ventilation At Lake MineBy Lucien Eaton
VENTILATION in the iron mines of the Lake Superior region in nearly all cases is natural; that is, it is induced by the difference in elevation between different outlets in the mine and by the differe
Jan 8, 1920
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Biographical Notice - Died in Service - Ralph Dougallcation received from Brigadicr General Thos. G. Hanson said: "It is my painful duty to communicate to you the fact of the loss of your son, Martin F Bowles. About 11 o'clock on the night of Septe
Jan 1, 1920
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The Annual DinnerBy AIME AIME
WEDNESDAY night, by long tradition, is al- ways set aside for the annual dinner, even when, as it was this year, it is Ash Wednesday. Whether the somewhat smaller attendance than last year is attribut
Jan 1, 1931
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Papers - The Creep of Metals (Institute of Metals Division Lecture, (T. P. 1071)By Daniel Hanson
FoR most of their practical applications metals are required to withstand stresses of appreciable magnitude: indeed, it id because they possess the quality of resisting stress without becoming permane
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - The Creep of Metals (Institute of Metals Division Lecture, (T. P. 1071)By Daniel Hanson
FoR most of their practical applications metals are required to withstand stresses of appreciable magnitude: indeed, it id because they possess the quality of resisting stress without becoming permane
Jan 1, 1939
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The Economic Impact of Uranium Mining in TexasBy George F. Learning
TOTAL DIRECT IMPACT The uranium mining industry's principal economic impacts on the Texas economy are the result of three flows of money from the industry into the remainder of the state&apos
Jan 1, 1980
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Atlantic City Paper - The Relation of the Strength of Wood under Compression to the Transverse StrengthBy Bernard E. Fernow
About eight years ago a comprehensive study of American timbers was begun in the U. S. Division of Forestry with a twofold object. On the one hand, it was desired to deternliiie the working-qualities
Jan 1, 1899
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New York September, 1890 Paper - The Iron Breaker at Drifton, with a 1)escription of Some of the Machinery Used for Halidling and Preparing Coal at the Cross Creek Collieries.By Eckley B. Coxe
The subject of this paper will be treated as briefly as possible under the following heads : I. The latest designs of some of the machinery used at these collieries in the preparation of coal. 1
Jan 1, 1891
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Baltimore (Annual) Meeting - February, 1892Jan 1, 1893
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Human Resourcefulness Key To Mineral SuppliesBy Max W. Ball
Our ever-increasing use of minerals has been the outstanding fact in our American economic development. The rise in our standard of living in the past century is without equal in human history. Nowher
Jan 1, 1949
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Coal - A Pattern for Sound Fuel ProcurementBy Marshall Pease, R. J. Brandon
A UTILITY that has a large consumption of coal must insure an adequate and sound supply of fuel. The Detroit Edison Co., which has an annual coal consumption of about four million tons and spends appr
Jan 1, 1952
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Symposia - Symposuim on Determination of Hydrogen in Steel - Methods of Analyzing for Hydrogen in Iron and Iron AlloysBy T. D. Yensen, R. K. McGeary
While we have not been primarily interested in the determination of hydrogen in the alloys that we have been dealing with, we arc very glad to cooperate in this symposium on sampling and analysis for
Jan 1, 1945
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Specific Efficiency of the Blast Furnace (63097711-d390-43c9-972d-cd4f44615c32)By Richard Franchot
DISCUSSION of a paper is sometimes more in-teresting in what has not been said than in what is said. In the present case the paper is mainly directed to certain thermo-dynamic relation-ships in the bl
Jan 3, 1927
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The Pattern of the ECA in Mineral AffairsBy C. H. Burgess
ON June 5, 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall in a speech at Harvard University outlined a plan for the economic recovery of Europe. The plan contemplated that the United States should provid
Jan 1, 1950
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Search for the Causes of Injury to Vegetation in an Urban Villa Near a Large Industrial EstablishmentBy Persifor Frazer
INTRODUCTION For various reasons I have not specified the locality where the research indicated in the following pages was undertaken. It will suffice to say that it was on the grounds of a villa onc
May 1, 1907
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Smelting and Labor at a Mexican Copper MineBy LEONARD S. AUSTIN
THE works of The Boleo Mining Co. are situated at Santa Rosalia, Lower California, on the opposite side of the Gulf of California from Guaymas, the, nearest railroad town. The copper deposits were dis
Jan 1, 1929
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Geographical Distribution of the U. S. Mineral IndustryBy AIME AIME
MINERAL production of the United States is valued at over five billion dollars a year at present and the industry employs close to a million workmen, yet such maps as are available that might indicate
Jan 1, 1941