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Milling Methods in 1929By Galen H. Clevenger
THE real and permanent advances which take place in any industry are for the most part slow evolutions which frequently develop and grow almost imperceptibly from clay to clay. A meritorious idea may
Jan 1, 1930
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55. Geology of the Spar Mountain Beryllium District, UtahBy Daniel R. Shawe
Large tabular beryllium deposits in waterlaid rhyolitic tuff at Spor Mountain, Utah, contain the world's largest known resources of beryllium (as bertrandite). The district also has produced fluorspar
Jan 1, 1968
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Mid-Winter Meeting of the Institute - 133rd Meeting At New York, February 15 To 18, Adds A Brilliant Page To Institute HistoryBy AIME AIME
N EARLY 1300 members and guests crowded the halls of the Engineering Societies Building during the winter meeting of the Institute just closed, and more than 600 attended the banquet. In variety of pr
Jan 1, 1926
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Constitution of Alloys of Aluminum, Zinc and Tin and Aluminum, Zinc and Cadmium ((Detroit Meeting September, 1920)By V. Jares
DESPITE the fact that a combination of metals-aluminum-zinc-tin, and sometimes aluminum-zinc-cadmium-is extensively used for aluminum solders, as well as for die-castings, the constitution of these al
Jan 1, 1927
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Part VII – July 1969 – Papers - Nitrogenation of Fe-AI Alloys. II: The Adsorption and Solution of Nitrogen in Nitrogenated Fe-AI AlloysBy H. H. Podgurski, J. C. M. Li, Y. T. Chou, F. N. Davis, R. A. Oriani
When an Fe-2 pct A1 alloy is nitrogemted at 500ºC with a gus tnixture (NH3-H2) in which the nitrogen activity has been kept Lou] enough to avoid the formation of iron nitride, a two-phase alloy is gen
Jan 1, 1970
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Discussion Of The Milling Methods Papers Presented At The New York Meeting, February, 1925CONTENTS DAVIS, CARL R., WILLEY, J. L., and EWING, S. E. T.-Recent Developments in the Fine Grinding and Treatment of Witwatersrand Ores. Discussed by Charles E. Locke, H. W. Hardinge, H. N. Spicer,
Jan 6, 1925
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Division Lectures - The 1962 Extractive Metallurgy Lecture - The World's Most Complex Metallurgy (Copper, Lead, and Zinc)By Albert J. Phillips
The effect of impurities on the flowsheet in the smelting and refining circuits for copper, lead and zinc is reviewed and the interflow of by-poduct metals from copper, lead and zinc plants is pointed
Jan 1, 1962
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Institute of Metals Division - Crystallography of Cubic-Tetragonal Transformation in the Indium-Thallium SystemBy L. Guttman, C. S. Barrett, J. S. Bowles
THE transformation from the face-centered cubic (Al) to the face-centered tetragonal (A6) structure in certain alloys of the indium-thallium system reported in the preceding paper1 exhibits many inter
Jan 1, 1951
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Discussion of Papers Published Prior to 1954 - Alkali Reactivity of Natural Aggregates in Western United States (1953) 196, p. 991By William Y. Holland, Roger H. Cook
Dexter H. Reynolds (Chapman and Wood, Mining Engineers and Consulting Geologists, Albuquerque, N. M.)—A number of questions are raised by conclusions and inferences made in the above-mentioned paper.
Jan 1, 1955
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The Mineral Position of the United States and the Outlook for the Future ? Decreasing Self Sufficiency Seen in the Postwar YearsBy Elmer W. Pehrson
OPINION seems widely divergent as to where we stand with respect to future mineral supply. From some quarters we hear that the United States is about to become a "have-not" nation and about to experie
Jan 1, 1945
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Some Things We Don't Know about the Creep of MetalsBy H. W. Gillett
UNLIKE most previous Howe lecturers, I had not the good fortune to be associated with Henry Marion Howe, nor to be directly one of his students. Yet, through his writings, he has been my teacher, as h
Jan 1, 1939
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Economic Results of the New Technique in Phosphate RecoveryBy Charles E. Heinrichs
IN the last decade one of our oldest and largest non-metallic metallic mineral industries has been the subject of persistent technical research, the results of which are another example of the benefit
Jan 1, 1933
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Institute of Metals Division - Strain Hardening and Stress Dependency of Dislocation Velocity in Alpha-Iron Alloys with a Dispersed PhaseBy J. O. Brittain, E. P. Lautenschlager, F. Felberbauer
This investigation was undertaken to evaluate the effect of a dispersed phase in a iron upon the strain hardening and the stress dependency of dislocation velocity as inferred from the strain-rate sen
Jan 1, 1964
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Discussion - Of Mr. Baker's Paper on Improvements in the Mechanical Charging of the Modern Blast-Furnace (see p. 553)Mr. John J. Porter, Chicago Ill. (communication to the Secretary†):—Mr. Baker's account of his experiences with stock-distribution has been particularly interesting to me, as it
Jan 1, 1905
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NaturalnesscBy T. A. Rickard
The key-note of good writing, as of good manners, is B natural. Sincerity is the first requisite for effective writing. When a man says what he knows or believes, he is likely to be interesting, becau
Jan 1, 1931
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Salt Lake Paper - The Leaching of Copper Ores. A DiscussionR. C. Canby, Wallingford, Conn. (communication to the Secretary*). —Apropos of the experimental reduction of copper from cuprous chloride by fusion with ground limestone and colre, as described by Mes
Jan 1, 1915
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Natural Gas Technology - An Attempt to Predict the Time Dependence of Well Deliverability in Gas Condensate FieldsBy J. Husson, R. Iffly, M. Gondouin
A systematic variation of well deliverability, as reflected from isochronal back-pressure tests performed at regular intervals, has been observed in some gas condensate wells producing at high rates.
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The Ultimate Source Of Ores.By Charles R. Keyes
the leaching of near-by rocks, had had no other result than to bring out from obscurity three certain features of practical lmport, all the labor of that controversy would have been well expended. Th
Jul 1, 1910
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The Leaching Of Copper OresDiscussion of the papers of FREDERICH LAIST and HAROLD W. ALDRICH, FREDERICH LAIST and F. F. FRICK, W. L. AUSTIN, and STUART CROASDALE, presented at the Salt Lake meeting, August, 1914, and printed in
Jan 11, 1914
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Institute of Metals Division - Preferred Growth Direction of MetalsBy W. A. Tiller
SEVERAL authors1-6 have shown that, during solidification from the melt, the direction of formation of substructure boundaries depends upon the direction of heat flow and the rate of solidification of
Jan 1, 1958