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Employment (41b420df-94f8-4e4e-9c72-75f7be310ead)POSITIONS VACANT (Under this heading will be published notes sent to the Secretary of the Institute by members or other persons.) Position open as assistant superintendent at a steel plant. Practica
Jan 5, 1914
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Industrial Minerals - California TalcsBy Lauren A. Wright
SINCE the early nineteen-thirties the production of talc* in California has increased five-fold to a yield in 1947 of about 76,000 tons (fig. 1); conse- .' Unless otherwise qualified, the term
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - California TalcsBy Lauren A. Wright
SINCE the early nineteen-thirties the production of talc* in California has increased five-fold to a yield in 1947 of about 76,000 tons (fig. 1); conse- .' Unless otherwise qualified, the term
Jan 1, 1951
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The Wrong WordFlaubert, as we know, laid stress on the selection of the right word, le mot juste, the precise epithet, the word that belongs to the thing. A sentence, or even a paragraph, may be spoiled. by the use
Jan 1, 1931
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Stewardship of Joint Conference CommitteeBy RICHARD L. HUMPHREY
IT IS proper that there should be a brief accounting of the stewardship which was entrusted to the Joint Conference Committee by resolution adopted by the. Organizing Conference on June 4, 1920, in pa
Jan 1, 1920
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Natural Gas Technology - A Method of Calculating the Distribution of Temperature in Flowing Gas WellsBy Frank Marotta, Louis B. Lesem, Frank Greytok, John J. McKetta
Although one of the primary variables in the calculation of the flowing bottom-hole pressure in gas wells from surface measurements is the temperature at any point and its distribution in the flow-str
Jan 1, 1958
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Coal Faces Postwar ReadjustmentBy Robert M. Weidenhammer
For years before the war, Coal had the reputation of being a sick industry. Currently it is operating at peak production and succeeding pretty well in keeping out of the red. But, says Mr. Weidenhamme
Jan 1, 1943
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Emergence Of By-Product CokingBy C. S. Finney, John Mitchell
The decline of the beehive coking industry was inevitable, but it had filled the needs and economy of its day. A beehive plant required neither large capital investment to construct nor an elaborate a
Jan 1, 1961
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Reservoir Engineering–General - Computer Prediction of Water Drive of Oil and Gas Mixtures Through Irregularly Bounded Porous Media–Three-Phase FlowBy R. V. Higgins, A. J. Leighton
Interest by petroleum engineers in the flow of three phases—oil, gas and water—in irregularly bounded porous media lies mostly in the performance calculation of water floods of reservoirs that have be
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Manufacture Of Cast-Iron Pipe In The SouthBy Richard Moldenke
The author discusses some economic conditions which have made the career of the cast-iron pipe industry in the United States a checkered one. He next describes the two new developements in the manufac
Jan 9, 1924
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How Proper Initiation Can Maximize ANFO EnergyBy Paul H. Rydlund
Substantial priming was a considered necessity for proper initiation of ammonium nitrate-fuel oil mixes as ANFO began to carve its niche in the mining industry in the latter fifties. Heavy priming acc
Jan 3, 1973
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Technical Notes - Investigation of Grain Boundary Phase In Stainless SteelBy C. C. Clark, J. R. Mihalisin, K. G. Carroll
OBSERVATIONS made in this paper were for the purpose of exploring the anomalous behavior of a particular heat of Type 310 stainless steel. The alloy, of nominal composition 25 pct Cr, 20 pct Ni, wa
Jan 1, 1958
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Industrial Minerals - Comparative Furnace Designs for the Expansion of PerliteBy Herbert A. Stein, John B. Murdock
AN analysis of perlite expansion furnaces must be based upon one consistent theory which explains how and why perlite does expand when heated. There is more than one such theory, so to establish a bas
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Comparative Furnace Designs for the Expansion of PerliteBy Herbert A. Stein, John B. Murdock
AN analysis of perlite expansion furnaces must be based upon one consistent theory which explains how and why perlite does expand when heated. There is more than one such theory, so to establish a bas
Jan 1, 1951
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Experiments With An Underground AugerBy J. P. Newell, R. W. Storey
AUGER mining is a form of continuous mining in that it completely replaces with a one-cycle operation the older conventional cut, drill, shoot, and load method of mining. Relatively new, having been u
Jan 1, 1952
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - Can we Transmit Power in Large Amount by Electricity?By N. S. Keith
This question is suggested by a statement made by Dr. Siemens, widely printed in the journals of the day, that a continuous rod of copper, thirty miles in length and three inches in diameter, is capab
Jan 1, 1879
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Washington Paper - Kernel-RoastingBy Herman Poole
When finely divided ferrous sulphide, FeS, is roasted at a moderate, carefully-regulated temperature, the iron and sulphur are oxidized, the first products being probably ferrous oxide and sulphurous
Jan 1, 1906
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New York - Philadelphia Paper - The Camp Bird Mine, Ouray, Colorado, and the Mining and Milling of the OreBy Chester Wells Purington
Situation.—The Camp Bird mine is in Imogene basin† (Fig. 1) at the head-waters of Canon creek, a branch of the Gunnison, in the southern part of Ouray county, Colorado, towards the northern edge of th
Jan 1, 1903
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Can we Transmit Power in Large Amount by Electricity?By N. S. Keith
(Read at the Wilkes-Barre Meeting, May, 1877.) THIS question is suggested by a statement made by Dr. Siemens, widely printed in the journals of the day, that a continuous rod of copper, thirty miles
Jan 1, 1878
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Subsidies for Mine ProductionBy Evan Just
DIRECT subsidies for mine production in this country began as an outgrowth of wartime 'price regulation. The price-fixing authorities realized that the volume of production to be required from do
Jan 1, 1948