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Milling MethodsBy AIME AIME
THE session on milling methods on Monday afternoon.* with G. H. Clevenger, chairman of the Mining Methods Committee presiding, was well attended. However, none of the authors of the papers presented w
Jan 1, 1929
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Virginia Paper - Notes on the Gold-Mill ConstructionBy A. J. Bowie
The discovery of the auriferous cement gravel deposits in and near Deadwood Gulch, Lawrence County, Dakota Territory, in 1876, created a mining excitement, and rush to the Black Hills. Numerous ten an
Jan 1, 1882
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Employment (95d29bb5-2d0c-4b1e-ad08-d644259b8d26)POSITIONS VACANT The National Bureau of Standards needs men to fill metallurgical positions with salaries varying from $1200 to $2000, depending upon the training and experience of the candidate. E
Jan 10, 1917
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Institute of Metals Division - Beta Phase Parameters in the System Ti-V-MoBy Jack L. Taylor
As expected from similar crystal structures and favorable atomic size factors, titanium, vanadium, and molybdenum are completely soluble in one another above the transformation temperature of titanium
Jan 1, 1957
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Mineral Wealth and Industrial Power – Communist China’s Boasts Begin to Come TrueBy K. P. Wang
Under the Communist regime marked industrial progress has been achieved on the China mainland. Within a decade, the country has been transformed from an economy primarily agricultural to one bristling
Jan 8, 1960
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More Jobs For Geology Spur Better Mapping Methods At Bingham CanyonBy Edward C. John, Wilbur H. Smith
At the Bingham Canyon pit operated by Kennecott's Utah Copper Division, the demand for geology has recently grown and diversified so rapidly that it has necessitated a revolution in geologic mapp
Jan 9, 1969
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Growing Import of State Geological SurveysBy George C. Branner
STATE geological surveys have had an interesting development in this country. They first appeared more than a hundred years ago. The fact that they have persisted and are now an important part of most
Jan 1, 1941
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A New Angle In Shaft SinkingBy J. C. Donnell, O&apos
Sinking an inclined ventilation shaft at the Never Sweat mine of The Anaconda Co. has required a unique underground hoisting arrangement because the shaft changes direction from vertical to 71.5º. Acc
Jan 11, 1965
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Paper - Magnetic Methods - Theory of A. Schmidt’s Horizontal Field Balance (With Discussion)Some 15 years ago, Dr. Adolf Schmidt, director of the Magnetic Observatory in Potsdam, Germany, developed an instrument, which was a modification of Lloyds balance, for the measurement of the vertical
Jan 1, 1929
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Experience With Artificial Slag Insulation On Continuously Cast LadlesBy F. C. Muttitt
The physical arrangement of the continuous casting facilities at Algoma have been described a number of times in previous papers. For the purposes of this discussion, it is sufficient to state that th
Jan 1, 1972
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Happy Days Are Here AgainBy AIME AIME
NEW YORKERS look forward to the third week of February as the time of the year when they can count on seeing their friends-from far and near gathered in the city for the four-day annual session of the
Jan 1, 1931
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Southeastern ldaho Phosphate Mining: How an Environmental Impact Statement Distorts Growth PlansBy Ta M. Li
How will phosphate producers in southeastern Idaho fare with growing governmental regulations and environmentalism of the late 1970's? With a similarity that is reminiscent of the battles between
Jan 1, 1978
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Production Engineering and EngineersBy E. H. Griswold
PETROLEUM production engineering is essentially the application of the laws of 'physics and mechanics to the production of oil. A true production engineer is one who can apply the principles of m
Jan 1, 1932
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PART VI - Binary Eutectic SolidificationBy K. A. Jackson, J. D. Hunt
A new classification of eutectics is proposed, based on tlze entvopies of wzelting of the tuio eutectic phases. The clnssification was used to predict suitable tvansparent analogs of the metallic syst
Jan 1, 1967
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High-Temperature Resistance Furnaces with Ductile Molybdenum or Tungsten ResistorsBy Ruder, W. E.
CONSIDERABLE interest has been shown lately in various types of furnaces for the production of high, temperatures, both for laboratory purposes and for small industrial uses. Dr. J. A. Harker1 describ
Jan 2, 1918
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Arizona Paper - The Illuminating Power of Safety LampsBy W. M. Weidel
While electric lamps both of the cap and hand type are being introduced into many mines requiring the use of safety lamps, the oil-burning safety lamp is still used in the great majority of cases, and
Jan 1, 1917
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Truck Haulage Improved at Inspiration by Attention to DetailsBy Tom Bilson
TO recover the remaining ore tonnages along the south side of the Inspiration orebody, the company began open-pit operations in early 1948 in addition to underground mining. Due to the differences in
Jan 8, 1951
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The Russian Cooperative Movement and its Relation to Capital and LaborBy Walter G. Perkins
T SEEMS almost sheer presumption to attempt' to discuss Russia in its present chaotic political and economic condition, and were it not that at least two certain absolute factors are continuously
Jan 1, 1920
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Theory Of Lattice Expansion Introduced By Cold-Work - General TheoryBy Clarence Zener
IT has long been known that the density of a metal usually decreases with cold-work. Thus O'Neill1 observed as early as 1861 that cold hammering of commercial hot-rolled copper is accompanied by
Jan 1, 1941
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Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - The Mineral Wealth of JapanBy Henry S. Munroe
The earliest accounts we have of Japan represent the country as having great mineral wealth, especially of precious and useful metals. Marco Polo, the Venetian traveller, in the thirteenth century, wr