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Cell Design For Electrolytic Silver Recovery From Various Dilute Aqueous Solutions - SummaryBy Roland Kammel
For electrolytic recovery of silver from dilute aqueous solutions improved mass transfer is necessary to achieve favourable current efficiencies and high space-time yields. The many cell designs propo
Jan 1, 1984
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47. Geology and Ore Deposits of the East Tintic Mining District, UtahBy D. R. Cook, W. M. Shepard, H. T. Morris
The East Tintic district in central Utah has produced ores of gold, silver, copper, lead, and zinc valued at more than $120,000,000. All of this ore has been produced from blind ore bodies in Paleozoi
Jan 1, 1968
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67. The Homestake MineBy A. L. Slaughter
The Homestake mine, located in western South Dakota, was discovered in 1876. The first reported production was in I 878. Total production through 1965 is 6,554,249 troy ounces of silver and 27,961,276
Jan 1, 1968
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46. Fine Gold Occurrence at Carlin, NevadaBy Paul F. Kerr, Donald M. Hausen
Fine colloidal gold near Carlin, Nevada is disseminated in leached carbonate strata of the Roberts Mountains Formation in the Lynn "window" of the Roberts Mountains thrust fault. The ore body is gener
Jan 1, 1968
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21. The Upper Mississippi Valley Base-Metal DistrictBy Allen V. Heyl
This old district is a major zinc and lead source and minor copper and barite source. Ores are chiefly in the Galena Dolomite and in limestones and dolomites of the Decorah and Platteville Formations,
Jan 1, 1968
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53. Ore Deposits of the Park City District with a Contribution on the Mayflower LodeBy Marvin P. Barnes, John G. Simos
The Park City District, Utah, is situated in the Wasatch Range at the intersection of the westward extension of the axis of the Uinta Range. Ore has been mined almost continuously from the first disco
Jan 1, 1968
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Biographical Notices - George Edward WebberGeorge Edward WebbeR, a member of the Institute since 1906, died in San Francisco, May 29,1922. Born in Dixmont, Me., in 1852, he went to California in 1857 where he lived until 1883 and received a th
Jan 1, 1923
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Biographical Notices - George Edward WebberGeorge Edward WebbeR, a member of the Institute since 1906, died in San Francisco, May 29,1922. Born in Dixmont, Me., in 1852, he went to California in 1857 where he lived until 1883 and received a th
Jan 1, 1923
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Note on the Defreest Journal-BearingBy J. C. Platt
I DESIRE to call the attention of the Institute to what is believed to be a new improvement in 'the construction of journal-bearings, having for its object the reduction of original cost as well
Jan 1, 1880
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Montreal Paper - Note on the Defreest Journal-bearingBy J. C. Platt
1 desire to call the attention of the Institute to what is believed to be a new improvement in 'the construction of journal-bearings, having for its object the reduction of original cost as well
Jan 1, 1880
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Effect of Selective Flotation on Copper SmeltingBy B. L. Sackett
In a general way, the situation in copper smelting is quite similar to that of lead smelting. In other words, the introduction and successful flotation of copper ores has tended to decrease greatly th
Jan 1, 1928
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Milwaukee Paper - Pure Carbon-free Manganese and Manganese Copper (with Discussion)By Arthur Braid
The war has caused an increasing scarcity of phosphorus and its well known alloys with copper and tin. At the same time, the production of brass and bronze, nickel-silver, cupro-nickel, and other non-
Jan 1, 1919
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Relations between Government Surveys and the Mining Industry - Public Geological Surveys and Geological EducationBy M. N. Short
It is almost self-evident that the student of geology depends for his education in geology only in small measure upon his own observation. His chief sources of information are lectures and personal in
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Well Logging - Factors Influencing Electrical Resistivity of Drilling Fluids (Abstract of T. P. 1466)By William M. Newton, John E. Sherborne
The value of the electric log as a means of interpreting underground structures has been increasingly demonstrated by its almost universal present-day use. It becomes important, therefore, to be able
Jan 1, 1946
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Pure Carbon-Free Manganese And Manganese CopperBy Arthur Braid
THE war has caused an increasing scarcity of phosphorus and its well known alloys with copper and tin. At the same time, the production of brass and bronze, nickel-silver, cupro-nickel, and other non-
Jan 11, 1918
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Smelting Copper Concentrates In A ConverterBy F. J. Longworth
For a number of years an intensive study has been made to improve the blast-furnace practice at Copperhill not only as to costs but to provide a good grade of gas for the acid plants. This study, took
Jan 9, 1924
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Note on the Crystal Structure of the Alpha Copper-tin AlloysBy Charles S. Barrett, Robert F. Mehl
It is generally understood by workers in the field of the crystal structure of metallic alloys that terminal solid solutions are of two types, the substitutional and the interstitial. In reviewing the
Jan 1, 1930
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Notes on the Assay Spitzlutte - From The Mining Laboratory of the Massachusetts Insti¬tute of TechnologyBy Robert U. Richards
THE spitzlutte, as described by Rittinger, is an instrument by which sand is sorted in a continual upward-flowing stream of water. Its usual form is that of a pointed box, placed with the point downwa
Jan 1, 1881
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Review of the Month (f41ba3a3-869f-4a88-a8ab-030df0957914)AT THE beginning of November, Mussolini had firmly established himself at the head of the Italian Government. He himself referred to the ascendancy of the Fascisti as the result of a revo-lution and b
Jan 12, 1922
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Broken Stay-BoltBy W. S. Ayres
THE boiler from which these stay-bolts have just been obtained was that of the locomotive Catasauqua, Lehigh Valley Railroad, built at the company's shops, South Easton, Pa., in 1864. The iron is
Jan 1, 1874