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Progress in Steel - How American Producers Have Met Competition and Consumers' Demands for Quality, Variety, and Reasonable PriceBy Clyde E. Williams
THROUGHOUT its history the American iron and steel industry has constantly striven to improve the quality and reduce the cost of its products. No one needs to be told how well it has succeeded. Its su
Jan 1, 1938
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The Estimation Of Petroleum ReservesBy Robert Pack
INTRODUCTION SOONER or later in the development of any natural resource it becomes highly desirable to know the quantity of this resource in the country as a whole, as well as of the part that is bei
Jan 8, 1917
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Buffalo Paper - The Mining Industry in its Relation to ForestryBy B. E. Fernow
In order to ascertain to what extent the mining industry has been dependent upon forest-supplies, for the purpose of a report upon
Jan 1, 1889
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Producotin Of Ferromanganese In The Blast FurnaceBy P. H. Royster
SOMETHING of a mystery has attached itself to the production of ferromanganese in the blast furnace. This alloy has been produced on the Continent almost continuously since 1876 and in very considerab
Jan 2, 1919
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Utilization Of Slag In The Birmingham District, Alabama (30500c31-0852-4009-9ab3-f9fa966e0d41)By Joseph C. Mead, James R. Cudworth
THE Birmingham district of Alabama has utilized the slag from its blast furnaces consistently since the earliest development of the slag industry. Today there are producers of slag cement who started
Jan 1, 1937
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New York Paper - Ore-Treatment at Republic, WashingtonBy Francis A. Thomson
But little has been written concerning the camp of Republic. In 1900 Chatard and Whitehead 1 reported the results of some experiments with samples of ore from the Republic mine, and a few years later
Jan 1, 1913
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Timbering at the Hecla MineBy ALEXANDER S. CORSUN
THE main orebody in the Hecla mine, Burke, Ida- ho, occurs along a nearly vertical shear zone in the Burke quartzite, with a substantial gouge and lamprophyre dike occurring in an irregular manner thr
Jan 1, 1930
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Hydro-Electric Development In Montana.Discussion of the paper of Max Hebgen, presented at the Butte meeting, August, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 80, August, 1913, pp. 1910 to 1933. A MEMBER :-Have there been any definite studies ma
Jan 11, 1913
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Arizona's Copper Province And The Texas LineamentBy Jacques B. Wertz
Both the San Andreas fault complex and the Murray fracture zone are apparently found to be contemporaneous with the Laramide mineralization period. Their compounding effects certainly have disturbed t
Jan 1, 1970
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Coal-Mining Practice in EuropeBy George S. Rice
INTERESTING developments going on in European coal mines look to: (1) increasing mechanization; 12) concentration of mining; (3) improvement in safety appliances; and (4) studies in bettering roof sup
Jan 1, 1934
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San Francisco Paper - Electro-Metallurgical Industries as Possible Consumers of Electric Power (with Discussion)By Dorsey A. Lyon, Robert M. Keeney
The utilization of hydro-electriic power in electro-metallurgical industries, aside from purely mechanical operations, may be of two kinds. The electric energy may be used to supply the heat necessary
Jan 1, 1916
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Geology Of The Silver-Lead-Zinc Deposits Of The Avalos-Providencia District Of MexicoBy W. H. Triplett
THE purpose of this paper is to record a few field observations and accumulated office data concerning outcrops, relation of ore occurrences to intrusive and host rock, and mineral zoning. Reasons for
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - Non-ferrous Metallurgy - Lead Alloys for Anodes in Electrolytic Production of Zinc of High Purity (With Discussion)By A. G. Taylor, H. P. Ehrlinger, U. C. Tainton
FOR the last 15 years lead has been the standard material for anodes in electrolytic zinc production and it has been generally accepted that this lead should be as free as possible from impurities. La
Jan 1, 1929
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Institute of Metals Division - Comments on the Determination, Analysis and Representation of Preferred Orientation (TN)By R. O. Williams
A recent article by Chernock, Singer, Mueller, and Beck 1 which supports the use of the integral of I sin $ d$ for comparing fiber texture data does not settle what happens to I sin ø as ø approach
Jan 1, 1960
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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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Capital Employed in the Petroleum IndustryBy Frederick G. Coqueron, Joseph E. Pogue
FOR a number of years, the Department of Petroleum Economics of The Chase National Bank has been conducting a study of the capital employed in the petroleum industry. The technique followed is that of
Jan 1, 1944
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San Francisco Paper - Recovery of Mercury from Amalgamation Tailing, Buffalo Mines, Cobalt (with Discussion)By E. B. Thornhill
In this paper on the recovery of mercury as sulphide, from the residues from the amalgamation and cyanide treatment of high-grade ores and concentrates, I will not discuss the many reactions, chemical
Jan 1, 1916
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Sponge Iron and Its Relation to the Steel IndustryBy Edward P. Barrett
DURING the past few years numerous references have been made in the technical press and Bureau of Mines Bulletin 270 to sponge iron' and so-called "direct metal" processes. The idea has been prev
Jan 1, 1930
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The Use Of Pulverized Coal As A Fuel For Metallurgical Furnaces.By H. R. Barnhurst
IT would be a difficult matter to trace from the beginning the very few improvements made in the burning of fuels prior to 1860. Doubtless the crossing of the sticks of wood in building a, wood fire e
Jan 10, 1913
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Recent Developments in Open-Hearth Furnace Design and OperationBy L. F. Reinartz
FROM the earliest times when our prehistoric ancestors laboriously fashioned crude tools and weapons from meteoric iron until our day when we manufacture steel in 150-ton open-hearth furnaces, the pro
Jan 1, 1936