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Collapsible Steel Props in Longwall Anthracite MiningBy John Buch
NEARLY 25 years ago operating officials in the northern anthracite field were confronted with the problem of profitably mining virgin beds of thin coal (those 48 in. and under) or destroying them by m
Jan 1, 1939
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The Fly-Ash Problem With Domestic Stokers And The Use Of Settling Chambers And Firebox BafflesBy T. S. Spicer, C. C. Wright, R. G. Bowman
IN recent years considerable publicity has been given to the problem of atmospheric pollution by fuel-burning equipment. Legislation has been stimulated and smoke ordinances have been enacted, the pro
Jan 1, 1944
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Increasing Dividends Through Personnel WorkBy Thomas Read
PERSONNEL work is a term recently introduced to cover the great variety of activities in industrial work that deal with the human factor. Much attention has been focussed upon individual phases of per
Jan 10, 1917
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The History and Legal Phases of the Smoke ProblemBy Ligon Johnson
ONLY the acute phase of the smelter fume problem is new. The problem itself is older than the Christian era. While both lead and copper were mined and crudely smelted ; on: 3,000 years ago, it was no
Jan 5, 1917
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True Stress-Strain Relations At High Temperatures By The Two-Load Method (f6c209f3-0348-4654-a448-dc544332b328)By L. E. Welch, C. W. MacGregor
THE past 20 years has seen a revolutionary change in the testing of materials at elevated temperatures. This has largely been brought about by the practical importance of the creep problem in the desi
Jan 1, 1942
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Development Of Residual Stresses In Strip RollingBy R. E. Ricksecker, W. M. Baldwin, R. McC. Baker
INTRODUCTION THE development of residual stress in strip during rolling has not been systematically studied. A few scattered papers1-3 mention the existence of residual stresses in rolled strip or
Jan 1, 1948
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Colorado Paper - Tailing Excavator at Plant of New Cornelia Copper Co., Ajo, Ariz. (with Discussion)By Franklin Moeller
Considering the really short time that has elapsed since hydro-metallurgical processes of extracting copper from ores have been extensively developed, and the large scale on which this method is pract
Jan 1, 1920
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Gasification By The Moving-Burden TechniqueBy J. W. R. Rayner
THE conventional method of making water gas involves individual plants for the separate carbonization of coal to coke and the subsequent gasification of coke with steam. The process demands lump cok
Jan 1, 1953
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Mechanical Installations for Gas-lift Pumping as Practiced in the California Oil FieldsBy H. C. Miller
THE gas-lift method of flowing oil from wells is the outstanding feature of petroleum technology today. Its forerunner, the air lift, was used successfully first, in the Baku fields of Russia, in 1899
Jan 1, 1927
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Effect of Fluid Viscosity on Cyclone ClassificationBy J. A. Herbst, G. E. Agar
The effect of fluid viscosity on the classification of solids in a liquid-solid cyclone was investigated. The separation size was found to be proportional to Additionally, it was found that the pre
Jan 1, 1967
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Copper and Copper AlloysBy W. H. Bassett
THE modern smelting and refining of copper is distinctly an American development. The present demand for sound and perfect castings for rolling is due to the development of American industry. Prac-tic
Jan 4, 1928
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El SalvadorAndes Copper has an old camp and a new camp, both isolated until recent road improvements. The old camp is at Potrerillos and the new one at El Salvador, 25 road ,miles away. The company was incorpora
Jan 11, 1969
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Mica (28ee116a-8aa3-4d28-9751-f6d0eeb35a0a)By Eugene H. Dawson
MICA is a mineral that once was a familiar sight as fireproof windows in stove and furnace doors and as lamp chimneys and shades. Since 1878, the beginning of the electrical age, the use of mica for s
Jan 1, 1949
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Symposia - Symposium on Hardenability - An Appraisal of the Factor Method for Calculating the Hardenability of Steel from Composition. (Metals Tech., Oct. 1945, T.P. 1933) with discussionBy A. J. Miller, G. R. Brophy
The Grossmann principle1 for the calculation of hardenability of steel from composition is attractive because of its simplicity. It postulates that the hardenability of a steel for any particular grai
Jan 1, 1947
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New York Secondary Metals - The Contamination of Metal Scrap, Its Effects on the Value, and Suggested Means by Control (with Discussion)By Carl O. Theime
Industrial specialization has rapidly created a demand for new and better alloys. A more thorough understanding of the requirements of specific industries and the discovery of processes by which it ha
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Oil LeasesBy J. Edgar Pew
As MOST of the oil production comes from leased-lands and not fee property, I shall refer to "leases" as covering the producing tracts. To produce oil, leases on land must first be obtained. Well-sel
Jan 8, 1925
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Discussion of Papers Published Prior to 1958 - Genesis of Titaniferous Magnetites and Associated Rocks of the Lake Sanford District, New YorkBy J. L. Gillson
Andre Hubaux: In the writer's opinion, more stress should be put on field and microscope observations, as J. L. Gillson does. His discovery of relics of big labra-dorite feldspars from the Marcy
Jan 1, 1959
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Sand Filling At The Homestake Mine (326987e0-7cf8-48e1-aace-e5f77c3e57cc)By A. J. M. Ross
BACKFILLING of stopes and other underground openings in the Homestake mine with sand tailings was undertaken primarily to reduce surface subsidence, which was wrecking much of the surface plant and a
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Ductile Tantalum and Columbium (With Discussion)By Clarence W. Balke
Small buttons of fused tantalum have been produced by are fusion in a vacuum, by drawing an arc between sticks of pressed tantalum and a tantalum-faced water-cooled copper block. However, ingots of ap
Jan 1, 1938
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Mining Methods of the Telluride DistrictBy Charles Bell
THE Telluride mining district of southwestern Colorado is defined by the 37° 45' and 38° parallels of latitude and 107° 45' and 108° meridians of longitude. Telluride was never a boom camp,
Jan 2, 1924