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Coal - Coal Preparation in England and Holland - DiscussionBy John Griffen
K. F. Tromp (Kerkrade, Holland)—Your assumption that the Dutch State Mines have lead in the development of heavy medium processes—the Barvoys, Loess, Driessen—is not correct. The credit should be give
Jan 1, 1952
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Controlling Fires in Mines With High-Expansion FoamBy Donald W. Mitchell, John Nagy, Edwin M. Murphy
In 1957 research was initiated in the U.S. Bureau of Mines experimental coal mine near Pittsburgh, Pa., to study factors affecting foam generation and transport, to evaluate the effectiveness of high-
Jan 9, 1960
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The Oil Demand, Supply And Price In 1928By Campbell Osborn
FROM the viewpoint of practical economic engineering the main value in studies of demand and supply lies in the information they give concerning the next movement of price. The title of this discussio
Jan 1, 1928
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Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Nonferrous MetallurgyBy W. M. Peirce
ON May 16, 1871, twenty-two men met in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, and founded the American Institute of Mining Engineers.* If we could transport ourselves back to that year and survey the state of sc
Jan 1, 1947
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Current Beneficiation Practices For Pebble Phosphate In FloridaBy W. A. LaVenue, W. M. Houston
Pebble phosphate mines of Florida have been established from south of Hardee County to north of the Georgia state line, a distance of over 200 miles. Mining has been carried out on an ever-increasing
Jan 11, 1962
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New York Paper - Nickel Deposits in the UralsBy H. W. Turner
The axis of the middle portion of the Ural mountains is made up chiefly of highly compressed igneous and sedimentary schists, considered of Devonian age by the Russian geologists, with large areas of
Jan 1, 1915
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Papers - Lead - Lead Blast-furnace Practice in MissouriBy C. M. Warner
In both the Flat River district of southeast Missouri and the Joplin district of southwest Missouri the lead concentrates are of very high grade, free of arsenic, antimony and bismuth, and contain no
Jan 1, 1937
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Blasting Coal Effectively and Safely in Southern IllinoisBy J. E. Tiffany
FOR blasting in coal mines the U. S. Bureau of Mines recommends that permissible explosives be used exclusively, that these shall be fired electrically, and that where feasible the working place shall
Jan 1, 1928
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Structure and Hysteresis Loss in Medium-Carbon SteelBy F. C. Langenberg
DURING the course of some magnetic investigations which the authors have under way, six bars of 0.43-carbon steel were tested, a permeameter designed after the Hopkinson yoke type being used. The resu
Jan 2, 1915
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Technical Notes - Pressure Distribution in Unsaturated Oil ReservoirsBy E. R. Brownscombe, Francis Collins
The pressure distribution in a reservoir producing an incompressible fluid by radial flow in a horizontal structure is a simple logarithmic function' used daily by reservoir engineers. The assump
Jan 1, 1950
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Essential Considerations In The Design Of Blast FurnacesBy A. L. Foell
THE development of the modern blast furnace began more than one hundred years ago, with the abandonment of the small hillside furnaces. Its development, especially during the past 50 years, has been a
Jan 1, 1942
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Oil And Gas Developments In Kansas During 1945By LEE H. CORNELL
Drilling activity in Kansas during 1945 continued at an accelerated pace to meet the demands of war; 1810 tests were drilled as compared with 1856 tests the previous year, 1771 tests in 1943, and 1516
Jan 1, 1946
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Aging And The Yield Point In Steel - IntroductionBy J. R. Low, M. Gensamer
During the course of an investigation into the drawability of automobile-body sheet steel, it became apparent that certain advantages would be possessed by a deep-drawing steel with a very low yield s
Jan 1, 1943
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Biographical Notice - Died in Service - Bernhardt E. HeineS., at Niagara Falls, as an expert chemist. There he was engaged in perfect.ing the various kinds of gases, and while thus employed was gassed several times, which so affected his heart and lungs that
Jan 1, 1920
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Rank of Iron Ore Mining Companies in 1933By AIME AIME
TOTAL shipments of iron ore from the Lake Superior district totalled 21,672,410 long tons in 1933, according to a compilation in Skillings' Mining Review. The producers ranked as follows in order
Jan 1, 1934
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The Losses In Copper Dressing At Lake Superior.*By H. S. Munroe
THE native copper of Lake Superior occurs in the form of fine grains and scales, disseminated in small percentage through the copper-bearing rock ; and in large and small masses, from a few pounds to
Jan 1, 1880
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An Early Discovery Of Fullers' Earth In Arkansas.By J. C. Branner
(New York Meeting, February, 1012.) DURING the past two or three years I have seen statements regarding the first discovery of fullers' earth in this country that seem to require correction or m
Jul 1, 1912
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Geophysics - Significance of Geochemical Distribution Trends in SoilBy D. H. Yardley
GEOCHEMICAL investigation of trace elements in surface materials was begun near Ely, Minn., in 1953 along the basal contact of Duluth gabbro with Giants Range granite (Fig. 1). This article presents d
Jan 1, 1959
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PART II - Communications - Martensite Reversion in Stainless SteelBy J. F. Breedis
The stabilization of austenite in Fe-Ni alloys against martensitic transformation after reversion has been attributed' to the lattice imperfections remaining from previous transformation. More re
Jan 1, 1967
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Institute of Metals Division - Porosity in Formed TitaniumBy R. A. Wood, R. I. Jaffee, H. R. Ogden, D. N. Williams
Strain-induced porosity has been found to occur in titanium and other materials at tensile strains greater than the uniform elongation of the material. Porosity in titanium increases with increasing s
Jan 1, 1960