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Direct Oxidation In The Basic Open Hearth ProcessBy Edward B. Hughes, Frank G. Norris
OXIDATION is characteristic of all processes for making steel from pig iron. This thought has been aptly expressed by H. W. Graham13 in the most recent Howe Memorial Lecture, "The process of steel-mak
Jan 1, 1948
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Factors In The Economics Of Heat-Treated TaconitesBy Will Mitchell, Ford F. Miskell, C. L. Sollenberger
THE taconites in general are hard, tough ores, difficult to grind. Liberation of iron mineral constituents usually is accomplished by grinding the ore through at least 100 mesh, and often it has been
Jan 1, 1952
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Role of Metals in New Transportation Symposium ContentsPAGE Problems of American Railroads Early in 1936, by J. J. Pelley 3 The Heavier Nonferrous Metals in Transportation, by C. H. Mathewson... 9 Light-weight Metals in the Transportation Industry, b
Jan 1, 1936
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The Young Mining Engineer in the Coal IndustryBy M. D. Cooper
UNDERGRADUATES in mining engineering may be prepared for work by giving them sound instruction in the courses generally considered essential to the profession. The industry is not deeply concerned abo
Jan 6, 1950
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Bridgeport Paper - Solids Falling in a Medium-IIBy F. M. F. Cazin
In my first paper, relating in general to the movement of solids in a medium, I stated a newly-discovered natural law, and explained its application to mechanical ore-concentration. This law, as appli
Jan 1, 1895
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New Industrial Mineral Mines In The Northern CircumpacificBy John R. Burger
Industrial mineral mines that have recently been opened, or soon will be opened in the northern circumpacific will produce potash in Canada, Mexico, and Thailand; phosphate in the US, Mexico, and Colo
Jan 1, 1982
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Differential Crystallization in a Cast-steel Runner ? DiscussionHENRY M. Howe, Bedford Hills, N. Y (written discussion*).¬Mr. Foley's explanation of this interesting occurrence is perfectly reasonable. Possibly a word explaining the phenomenon more in detail
Jan 10, 1919
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Trends In Earnings Of Engineers, 1956 To 1958Earnings of engineers in the period 1956 to 1958 continued the upward trend observed in the previous survey interval, 1953 to 1956. The overall median (all graduates) was $6500 in 1953, $7750 in 1956
Jan 1, 1959
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Geophysics - A Decade of Development in Overvoltage SurveyingBy R. W. Baldwin
As used in geophysical exploration, the term overvoltage applies to secondary voltages set up by a current into the earth which decay when the current is interrupted. These secondary effects may be me
Jan 1, 1960
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum Industry in Burma, 1935-1936By L. Dudley Stamp
The years 1935 and 1936 have been momentous ones in the history of oil exploitation in Burma. While the possibilities of the discovery of an important new field in the country have become increasingly
Jan 1, 1937
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Toronto Paper - The Occurrence of Nickel in VirginiaBy Thomas Leonard Watson
Sulphide ore-bodies of more or less lenticular shape occurring in metamorphic crystalline schists, gneisses, and slates, and conforming closely in strike and usually in dip to the inclosing rock, have
Jan 1, 1908
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Toronto Paper - Coal-Briquetting in the United StatesBy Edward W. Parker
Note.—The material from which this paper has been prepared was collected tor the U. S. Geological Suvey Bulletin, No. 316, Contributions to Economic Geology, 1906, and appears also, though in somewhat
Jan 1, 1908
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Present Applications Of Oxygen In Electric-Furnace SteelmakingBy J. H. Berryman
THE use of oxygen as a bath reagent in hearth furnaces during the refining period is a familiar story. Investigations and tests in which oxygen was substituted for iron ore to reduce carbon date back
Jan 1, 1947
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Institute of Metals Division - Preferred Orientation in ZirconiumBy R. K. McGeary, B. Lustman
The textures produced in zirconium by cold and hot rolling, and by recrystallization above and below the transformation temperature were determined. Thermal expansivities were measured in the thicknes
Jan 1, 1952
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Metal Mining - Mining Potash Ores in Carlsbad AreaBy Russell G. Haworth
Three companies, United States Potash Company, Potash Company of America, and International Minerals and Chemical Corporation, are now operating potash mines and reGneries in the Carlsbad, New Mexico,
Jan 1, 1950
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The Role Of Air Jets In Mine VentilationBy G. E. McElroy
THOUGH air jets occupy only a minor role in the ventilation of mines and other enclosures, their importance in this respect is greater than is commonly recognized and may be considerably increased as
Jan 1, 1945
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Aspects of the Mining Industry in British ColumbiaBy WILLIAM SLOAN
B RITISH COLUMBIA in its mining activities is going ahead by leaps and bounds both in development and production. Mineral production for 1925 was $61,492,242 in value as compared to $48,704,- 604 in 1
Jan 1, 1926
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Industrial Minerals - Fuel Economy in the Lepol KilnsBy R. A. Kinzie
THE major operating costs in a cement plant are labor, power, and fuel. The opportunities and methods of savings in labor and power parallel other industries. Because our industry's use of fuel i
Jan 1, 1951
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Trona In Wyoming (3b9e370f-a1a5-46cc-87d4-ad5e4f2e8a1a)By Howard I. Smith
THE mineral trona was discovered on Government land in 1938, about 18 miles west of the town of Green River, Wyo., in the core of the John Hay, Jr., well, a test well drilled for oil by the Mountain F
Jan 1, 1942
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Industrial Minerals - Fuel Economy in the Lepol KilnsBy R. A. Kinzie
THE major operating costs in a cement plant are labor, power, and fuel. The opportunities and methods of savings in labor and power parallel other industries. Because our industry's use of fuel i
Jan 1, 1951