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The Capillary Concentration Of Gas And Oil (e750f75c-e9a9-4ee2-99fc-82c999ff407b)This discussion of the paper of Chester W. Washburne should have been printed following the remarks of H. A. Wheeler, in Bulletin No. 100, April, 1915, pp. 835 and 836, but was inadvertently omitted.
Jan 5, 1915
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The History and Legal Phases Of The Smoke Problem (a9199862-219e-4199-9096-8b364972cffd)THE CHAIRMAN (J. W. MALCOLMSON, Kansas City, Mo.).-Gentlemen, Dr. P. J. O'Gara, Director of the Department of Agricultural and Smelter By-Products Investigations, of the American Smelting & Refin
Jan 1, 1918
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Can Anthracite Mines Be Operated Profitably On More Than One Shift?By Dever Ashmead
FROM time to time metal-mine engineers have inquired why anthracite mines and their preparators are rarely operated on the two or three-shift basis. The subject may be approached as affecting: labor,
Jan 2, 1922
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Boston Paper - The Method of Collecting Flue-Dust at Erns on the LahnBy T. Egleston
The importance of condensing the gases which escape from furnaces so as to save both the fine particles of ore carried off mechanically and those which are volatilized, has for a long time occupied th
Jan 1, 1883
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1963 Jackling Lecture - History, Growth and Development of a Small Mining CompanyBy Allan B. Bowman
Several years ago a wealthy Chinese business friend of mine purchased an interest in a pro- posed oil well to be drilled a great distance from his home. A few months later it came in as a producer and
Jan 6, 1963
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Section Delegates Talk Things OverBy AIME AIME
NO FEATURE of the annual meeting is considered more important at Institute headquarters than the assembly of delegates from the various local sections and divisions. There the president of the Institu
Jan 1, 1932
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Industrial Morale and Employees' MagazinesBy Daniel Bloomfield
ONE of the major problems of management is how to restore in some measure the personal relation-ship between employer and employed which, in the days of small concerns, meant better morale among emplo
Jan 9, 1922
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New York Paper - Blast-furnace Oporations and the Character of Pig Iron and Castings. Conference betwecn the Iron and Steel Committee of the A. I. M. E. and the American Foundrymen's AssociationThe Iron and Steel Committee of the American Institute, of mining and Metallurgical Engineers held a joint session with the American Foundrymen's Association during the Annual Meeting of the Inst
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Roasting And Leaching Tailings At Anaconda, Mont. (3a900937-42c5-47ac-a6ed-e338f9ccdab2)Discussion of the paper of Frederick Laist, presented at the Butte meeting, August, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 79, July, 1913, pp. 1147 to 1162. J. C. DICK, Salt Lake City, Utah :-I would like
Jan 11, 1913
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The Pro's and Con's of Rotary Blasthole Drill DesignBy Betty J. Laswell, Gerald W. Laswell
The stepped-up pace of US open-pit and surface mining during the 1970's is a direct response by mining firms and equipment manufacturers to rising costs and declining ore grades. In the race for
Jan 6, 1978
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Engineers and CitizenshipBy C. M. White
CITIZENSHIP is a rather abstract subject on which a great deal could be said-a subject on which a great deal is said -and still one which too many of us seldom think about and seldom work at. Too many
Jan 1, 1939
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Wise or Unwise?By P. D. Merica
MY remarks are addressed to the question whether a program of international mineral control can effectively serve as a means of maintaining world peace in the kind of world envisaged by the Atlantic C
Jan 1, 1944
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Flotation of Ores an Individual Problem ? Ideas Can Be Gained From Another Operator But Often They Do Not Work at HomeBy R. A. Pallanch
IN his recent paper, "The Controversial Art of Flotation," (Mining Technology, March, 1944) E. H. Rose states that "flotation is a science in so many variables that only art can blend them." This stat
Jan 1, 1945
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Changes in Mining Engineering, Present and ProspectiveBy E. L. Oliver
IN OFFERING a few comments and suggestions on trends in mining practice, and the methods and tools of tomorrow's mining, perhaps it will be appropriate to start with the subject of education. Cha
Jan 1, 1939
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Silver StabilizationBy JOHN JANNEY
STABILIZATION of the adjustment of normal consumption to normal production of world commodities is quite different from reducing production until visible surpluses are consumed. The first means resto
Jan 1, 1931
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Discussion - Of Mr. Meissner's Paper, Notes on the Gayley Dry-Air Blast-Process (see Trans., xxxvii., 201)J. E. Johnson, Jr., Glen Wilton, Va. (communication to the Secretary*):—Mr. Meissner announces early in his paper that one of its purposes is the discussion of my paper entitled, Notes on the Physical
Jan 1, 1908
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Simplified Spelling Foisted on the InstituteBy AIME AIME
MESSRS. BURT and Shockley and others have been for three years urging upon the Institute the matter of simplified spelling. The Institute endeavors to be progressive in the matter of spelling and. is
Jan 1, 1920
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Growth in the East (ff35979b-108c-4723-8364-17348e3eacc2)By Thomas T., Read
IN this survey of the progressive development (of education for the mineral industries throughout the United States, the review of .the history of each school has usually been completed wherever it is
Jan 1, 1941
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U. S. Foreign Policy for OilBy George A. Miller
THE outstanding characteristic of the American business man is that he likes to run his own business his own way, without any interference from his wife, his friends, his bankers, and least of all fro
Jan 1, 1944