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Melting Bearing Bronze in Open-flame FurnacesBy Ernest Darby
IF the correct balance between fuel and air is maintained in an open-flame furnace,1 little chemical action may be expected between the products of combustion and the metal being melted. Physical chan
Jan 1, 1930
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Recent Developments In Magnetic Separation EquipmentBy R. L. Watts
Successful mining of taconite has required the solution of a series of difficult problems, including more efficient magnetic separation. Progress in this field is evidenced by reductions in operating
Jan 12, 1967
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Soils in Geochemical ProspectingBy Robert E. Delavault, Harry V. Warren
Geochemistry in all its branches is playing G an increasingly important part in the business of mine finding. Although geochemical studies were commenced more than 50 years ago, interest in this subje
Oct 1, 1956
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Production Engineering - Bottom-hole Pressures in Oil WellsBy C. V. Millikan, C. V. Sidwell
There is nothing more important in petroleum engineering than a definite knowledge of the pressure at the bottom of an oil well at any existing operating condition, and the relation of this pressure t
Jan 1, 1931
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Oklahoma in 1942By Raymond D. Sloan
Retaining third place in crude-oil production among the nation's oil-producing states, Oklahoma's output in 1942 totaled 137,792,000 bbl., a decline of 9.4 per cent from the previous year&ap
Jan 1, 1943
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Oklahoma in 1942By Raymond D. Sloan
Retaining third place in crude-oil production among the nation's oil-producing states, Oklahoma's output in 1942 totaled 137,792,000 bbl., a decline of 9.4 per cent from the previous year&ap
Jan 1, 1943
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Oil And Gas Developments in Indiana in 1945By CHARLES F. DEISS
The total pipe-line runs of petroleum in Indiana during 1945 were 4,114,000 bbl., a decline of nearly 17 per cent below the estimated 4,950,000 bbl. produced in 1944. Drilling activity during the ye
Jan 1, 1946
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Three Big Factors In Stable Slope DesignBy C. O. Brawner
Simple, specific rules for achieving slope stability in open-pit mines are impossible to devise. Each pit has a different mining program and a different set of environmental conditions, and its final
Jan 8, 1969
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The Ground-Waters.*By James Kemp
(New York meeting, February, 1913.) IN the study of ore deposits water plays a very prominent part. The small group of igneous ores involve it least, but in all the rest it is an invariable feature.
Jan 4, 1913
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Slime Treatment By Flotation Process In Limestone MineBy H. Sato, I. Matsuoka, T. Kawai, S. Hasebe
In a limestone mine, a large amount of slime is washed off in order to remove impurities such as clay minerals. A fine sized calcite is, consequently, wasted and freight for carring the slime to recla
Jan 1, 1976
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The Magmont OperationBy A. J. W. Schwandt
Magmont is a venture jointly owned by Cominco American Incorporated of Spokane, Washington and Dresser Minerals, Division of Dresser Industries, Houston, Texas. Cominco American assumed direction of t
Jan 1, 1970
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A.I.M.E. Papers Published In 1944Papers in Classes A-Metal Mining, B-Milling and Concentration, H-Industrial Minerals, and I-Mining Geology are distributed in MINING TECHNOLOGY, which is issued every other month. Papers in Classes C-
Jan 1, 1946
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Phosphor us in Bituminous Coal and CokeBy Andrew S. McCreath
THE manufacture of pig iron for conversion into steel by the Bessemer and open-hearth processes, is now one of the most important industries of the United States. It is necessary that iron intended fo
Jan 1, 1880
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Thermal Model and Design in Shaft FreezingBy J. Weng
The equations of heat conduction are numerically solved for two kinds of artificial freezing- mechanical freezing and liquid nitrogen freezing. A two dimensional finite difference model simulating the
Jan 1, 1984
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Solubility Product And Bubble Attachment In FlotationBy M. D. Hassialis, Arthur F. Taggart
WARK1 observed some years ago that collector-coating reactions with xanthates and with fatty acids clearly follow paths parallel to those prescribed by the familiar mass-action law for reactions in di
Jan 1, 1946
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New Alloys in Mine Cage ConstructionBy AIME AIME
IN a recent technical paper of the Central Committee of the French Coal Mines (Note technique No. 198, by L. Lahoussay) the author points out that continuous in¬crease in depth of mine shafts makes it
Jan 1, 1933
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Recent Improvements in Bessemer MachineryBy A. L. Holley
THE members of the society are doubtless aware that the production of American Bessemer steel works is constantly increasing ; that the same converters and machinery are doing more work every year. Th
Jan 1, 1874
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Geology - Analysis of Structural Patterns in BedrockBy P. C. Badgley
The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the usefulness of systematic analyses of weakness patterns. The term weakness here includes structural features such as fractures, foliation planes, lineame
Jan 1, 1962
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Stability Of Slopes In Discontinuously Jointed RockBy Thomas M. Tharp
INTRODUCTION Attempts to analyze the stability of slopes, foundations and underground openings in discontinuously jointed rock have generally assumed full joint continuity or ignored the role of s
Jan 1, 1984
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Cuba during 1939By Robert H. Palmer
Sacuranao Field.—Bacuranao field is about 12 miles east of Havana, along the contact between Cretaceous sediments and a serpentine intrusion. The zone lies within an extensive anticlinorium. The field
Jan 1, 1940