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Reclaiming Non-ferrous Scrap Metals at Manufacturing PlantsBy Francis Flynn
MANY excellent papers, descriptive of the milling and smelting of every kind of commercial ores, the refining of virgin metals, the casting into various shapes demanded by the trade, the rolling into
Jan 1, 1929
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San Francisco Paper - Examination of Dredging-PropertiesBy Francis J. Dennis
Many factors govern the value of dredging-ground, and much capital can be wasted by the mistaken policy of contracting for the purchase of property arid the installation of machinery before a thorough
Jan 1, 1912
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Interfacing Technologies in Solution MiningBy Milton E. Wadsworth
Hydrometallurgical processing of ore deposits by solution mining or in situ techniques requires the interfacing of technologies as diverse as hydrology, geology, chemistry, and rubblization. This synt
Jan 12, 1977
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Petroleum Development In Illinois During 1924By Gail Moulton
THE oilfields in Illinois are located principally along the LaSalle anticline in the southeastern part of the state. The oil produced comes most largely from beds of Pennsylvanian and Mississippian ag
Jan 3, 1925
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V. Characters depending upon Electricity and MagnetismBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
436. Electrical Conductivity. - The subject of the relative conducting power of different minerals is one of minor interest.* In general most minerals, except those having a metallic luster among the
Jan 1, 1922
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Copper Cementation onto Beverage Can Aluminum AlloysBy V. Annamalai, J. B. Hiskey, L. E. Murr
The kinetics of copper cementation on rotating disks of body and tear-top beverage can aluminum alloys were studied as a function of temperature and copper ion concentration. Both alloys followed the
Jan 1, 1980
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Distribution of Lead Impurity in a Copper-refining Furnace BathBy Walter Scott
THE removal of lead by fire refining methods from copper of electrolytic quality is growing in importance. Particularly is this true of the refining of secondary copper and copper cathodes obtained fr
Jan 1, 1930
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Joint Activities (8e55803a-3c95-4846-b083-561dfddf6fb9)The Institute conducts jointly with the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers and American Institute of Electrical Engineers, certain activities as listed below
Jan 1, 1938
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Getting Mining Company’s Approach To Heap Leaching At The Mercur MineBy Kendall Y. Keuhey
The Mercur Mine, developed and operated by Getty Mining Company, is designed to process 3,000 tons/day of gold ore from the historic Mercur Hill mining district. The mill process involves crushing, gr
Jan 1, 1984
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Petroleum Development In Illinois During 1924 (f1ab394d-2a89-4a90-a3ec-42d7d928ceb9)By Gail Moulton
THE oilfields in Illinois are located principally along the LaSalle anti-cline in the southeastern part of the state. The oil produced comes most largely from beds of Pennsylvanian and Mississippian a
Jan 3, 1925
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Wire RopeBy Charles M. Haas
WHEN minable ore has been located, the problem of mining is synonymous with the problem of movement --movement of men and equipment to mine the ore, and movement of the ore from the earth to the mills
Jan 9, 1951
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Buffalo Paper - Tuyeres in the Iron Blast-Furnace (Discussion, 858, 902)By B. F. Fackenthal
The earliest history shows that, in the reduction of iron-ores, natural draft was used to supply the blast, and that, when artificial blast was first used, it was supplied by leather bellows, usually
Jan 1, 1899
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The Traveling Grate - Updraft Hardening Specular - Hematite PelletsBy Donald C. Violetta
LIMITATIONS of the sintering process as applied to the agglomeration of fine iron-ore concentrates are related directly to the sizes and aggregating properties of the ore particles. A normal sintering
Jan 3, 1958
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Uranium Deposits of the Blind River District, OntarioBy Franc R. Joubin, D. H. James
Uranium exploration in the North Shore area of Lake Huron goes back to 1847 when J. L. LeConte, a distinguished American geologist, identified a pitchblende-like mineral which he called coracite from
Jun 1, 1956
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Unusual Features in the New Los Angeles Oil FieldsBy Ralph Arnold
PERHAPS the most striking feature in the three newly discovered fields in the Los Angeles basin is the enormous thickness of oil sand. The total thickness is not yet known in any of the fields, since
Jan 5, 1923
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Steep Seam LongwallBy James K. Greenlee, David W. Wisecarver
It is estimated conservatively that some 14 billion tonnes of coal reserves in the United States exist in beds considered steeply dipping, i.e. at pitches or slopes in excess of 15O - a slope too stee
Jan 1, 1981
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Measurement Of Rock Pressure With A Hydraulic CellBy L. A. Panek
When rock is subjected to a load it is deformed. Ordinarily this is observed in a mine as the displacement of one point with respect to another-the deflection of the roof, which may be observed as a c
Jan 3, 1961
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Recent Developments In Rock Drilling At Chino MinesBy D. D. McNaughton
IN providing 65,000 tons of broken muck per day for shovel operation in a large open pit copper mine, drilling equipment and efficient use of that equipment is of prime importance. To improve existing
Jan 5, 1957
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Bethlehem Paper - Abstract of a Paper on the Mines and Works of the Lehigh Zinc CompanyBy H. S. Drinker
THE first discovery of zinc 011 the property now worked by this company was made by the celebrated mineralogist, Prof. William Theodore Rapper, in 1845. Different claimants kept the property in contin
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Iron Deposits of Wabush Lake, LabradorBy R. D. MacDonald
The search for metalliferrous deposits in the Labrador-Ungava Trough of Canada dates from 1929 when non-ferrous minerals were the main quest of prospectors in this area. Many gossans, resulting from t
Jan 10, 1960