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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Corrosion of Tin and Its Alloys. (With Discussion)By C. L. Mantell
Although so common and well known a metal, tin is really a less abundant element than many of those less familiar and usually ranked with the scarce or rare elements, such as cerium, yttrium, lithium,
Jan 1, 1929
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Part 1. Marketing Of Nonferrous Metals And OresBy S. D. Strauss
The marketing of nonferrous metals and of the ores and concentrates from which these metals are recovered is a fascinating trade, international in character, sensitive to every change in the economic
Jan 1, 1959
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Reports On Technological Research - Electronic Color Sorter Enhances Low-Grade GypsumBy Robert R. French
Beneficiation of low-grade nonmetalliferous mineral deposits by electronic color sorting is currently undergoing a period of rapid development. For those deposits in which the specific gravity, streng
Jan 4, 1969
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Special Methods for Polishing Metal Specimens for Metallographic ExaminationBy D. Beregekoff
In the routine examination of a wide variety of metal specimens it is sometimes necessary to have special methods of polishing in order to retain and reveal certain details in each specimen. Among suc
Jan 1, 1939
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Special Methods for Polishing Metal Specimens for Metallographic Examination (412bc4da-88b5-4633-8898-3b4e46723017)By D. Bergekoff
IN the routine examination of a wide variety of metal specimens it is sometimes necessary to have special methods of polishing in order to retain and reveal certain details in each specimen. Among suc
Jan 1, 1939
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Embrittlement Of Silver By Oxygen And HydrogenBy D. L. Martin, E. R. Parker
DURING the heat-treatment of silver specimens for tensile tests it was observed that the bars blistered and became brittle when heated in a hydrogen atmosphere. [ ] To check this unexpected result,
Jan 1, 1943
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V. Characters depending upon Electricity and MagnetismBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
436. Electrical Conductivity. - The subject of the relative conducting power of different minerals is one of minor interest.* In general most minerals, except those having a metallic luster among the
Jan 1, 1922
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Metallurgical Reactions of Fluorides - DiscussionBy Herbert H. Kellogg
C. M. Decroly (University of Brussels, Belgium) — The importance of the fluorides in the process metallurgy of special metals has already been accepted and it will probably increase in the future. Fre
Jan 1, 1952
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Melting And Alloying Of Wrought Copper AlloysBy R. S. Pratt
IT is proposed to discuss the materials and furnaces, as well as the melting procedures used in preparing metal for casting billets, bars or cakes for mill fabrication. As far as possible, considerati
Jan 1, 1946
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New York Paper - Subsidence at Miami, Arizona (with Discussion)By J. Parke Channing
The Miami orebody occurs in an altered Pinal schist. It is popularly known as one of the '(porphyry " deposits but, as at Inspiration and Ray, the ore is an altered mincralized Pinal schist. The
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Subsidence at Miami, Arizona (with Discussion)By J. Parke Channing
The Miami orebody occurs in an altered Pinal schist. It is popularly known as one of the '(porphyry " deposits but, as at Inspiration and Ray, the ore is an altered mincralized Pinal schist. The
Jan 1, 1923
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Leaching: Use Of A High-Temperature MicrobeBy Corale L. Brierley
An unidentified, high-temperature microbe, which oxidizes reduced sulfur and iron in an acid medium between 45° and 75°C, is studied to determine its ability to leach copper sulfide minerals and molyb
Jan 1, 1974
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New York Paper - Modern Gas-Power Blower StationsBy Arthur West
It is the purpose of this paper to describe briefly some recent large power stations for blast furnaces, where the blast is exclusively supplied by gas engines using furnace gas. The stations are give
Jan 1, 1915
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Efficiency of Flowing WellsBy Cecil J. May
The importance of a knowledge of the physical laws involved in the production of oil from a reservoir has come to be generally realized in recent years and it is therefore unnecessary to elaborate on
Jan 1, 1935
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Bethlehem Paper - A Reference-Scheme for Mine-WorkingsBy Wilbur E. Sanders
At some period during the operation of metalliferous and other commercially valuable mineral-deposits in connection with their underground mining, when the developments therein have become so extensiv
Jan 1, 1907
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Mineral Potential Of JapanBy Yoshihiko Shimazaki, Hokuichiro Ohmachi
Mineral resources of Japan are remarkably characterized by the diverse variety of ores. Seventeen kinds of metallic ores are produced in Japan from approximately 175 mines, but the country is becoming
Jan 1, 1976
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Reservoir Engineering–General - An Approximate Method for Transient Radial FlowBy G. Rowan, M. W. Clegg
The basic equations for the flow of gases, compressible liquids and incompressible liquids are derived and the full implications of linearising then discussed. Approximate solutions of these equations
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Iron and Steel Division - Density of Liquid Iron SilicatesBy R. G. Ward, John Henderson. R. G. Hudson, G. Derge
Densities of melts of the iron oxide-silica system in contact with solid iron have been measured by the maximum hubble pressure method in the composition range O to 37 wt pct SiOz and the temperature
Jan 1, 1962
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A Different Method Of Modeling A Mineral Deposit For A Three-Dimensional Open Pit Computer Design ApplicationBy Marc Lemieux
Computer pit design techniques generally make use of models in which the deposit is represented by a regular array of data. Using a regular system, the number of data points required to represent the
Jan 1, 1977
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Evaluation and Prediction of Optimum Cleaning ResultsBy F. F. Peng, A. D. Walters, M. R. Geer, J. W. Leonard
INTRODUCTION Washability characteristics derived from float-and-sink analysis in Chapter 4 demonstrate that coal is intrinsically heterogeneous, and this heterogeneity is also evident in the proxi
Jan 1, 1979