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RI 8045 Low-Temperature Heat Capacities and Enthalpy of Formation of Copper OxysulfateBy J. M. Stuve
Low-temperature heat capacities and the enthalpy of formation were deter-mined calorimetrically by the Bureau of Mines for CuO?CuS04. The derived standard entropy (S°298.15) was 40.36±0.04 cal/deg-mol
Jan 1, 1975
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IC 8099 Use Of High-Speed Data Reduction And Processing In The Mineral Industry ? Summary And IntroductionBy Richard F. Hewlett
The purpose of this Bureau of Mines paper is to provide the mineral industry with current information on high-speed data processing and to illustrate how some of these techniques can be applied to the
Jan 1, 1962
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IC 6627 Iron Oxide Pigments and Mortar ColorsBy R. M. Santmyers
The pigments, whose colors are due primarily to iron exides and iron hydroxides, comprise a variety of yellow, brown, red, and sometimes black paint-coloring agents, both natural and artificially prep
May 1, 1932
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IC 6146 Safeguarding Electrical Equipment Used In Gassy Mines - European Practice: IV - FranceBy L. C. IlsLey
Cooperation between the United States Bureau of Mines and the Safety in Mines Research Board of Great Britain, continuous, since 1924, s made possible this and other papers on safety subjects. Gratefu
Jan 1, 1929
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IC 7610 Tunnel Construction By Peripheral Sawing At The Fort Randall Reservoir, Pickstown, S. Dak. - Introduction And SummaryBy Walter E. Lewis
The Fort Randall Reservoir project, on the Missouri River at Pickstown, S. Dak., was designed by the Corps of Engineers and is part of the Missouri River Basin Development Program. The location of the
Jan 1, 1951
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IC 6501 Essential Factors Influencing Subsidence And Ground Movement - IntroductionBy W. R. Crane
Subsidence and ground movement are phenomena common to and attendant upon practically all large-scale mining operations, and under certain conditions may occur in all workings, large and small. The
Jan 1, 1931
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RI 6691 Diborides in the Pseudobinary System TiB2-CrB2: Electrical PropertiesBy Gilbert M. Farrior
The electrical resistivity the coefficient of electrical resistivity the Hall coefficient, and the absolute thermoelectric power were determined in this Bureau of Mines investigation for nine composit
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 2697 Method Of Increasing Lump-Coal Production, With Especial Reference To Southern IllinoisBy J. E. Tiffany, J. J. McKitterick
"IntroductionThe Bureau of Mines is investigating the fundamental factors in breaking down coal at the face, which govern the production of lump coal in typical mines working, different coal beds. Ti
Aug 1, 1925
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IC 7334 Method Of Handling Hydrogen Sulfide Gas In The Elk Basin Oil Field Of Wyoming - IntroductionBy J. H. East
The occurrence of hydrogen sulfide in the gas in solution in the oil produced from the Tensleep sandstone in the Elk Basin oil field in Wyoming constitutes a serious hazard to persons working in, that
Jan 1, 1945
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Evaluation and Application of a Portable Tailpipe Emissions Measurement Apparatus for Field UseBy L. M. Chan, D. H. Carlson, J. H. Johnson
"This paper discusses the evaluation and application of a portable parked-vehicle tailpipe emissions measurement apparatus (EMA). The EMA consists of an exhaust dilution system and a portable instrume
Mar 1, 1992
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RI 6775 Reduction Roasting-Acid Solution Techniques In Laboratory Processing Of Minnesota Manganiferous OresBy P. L. Weston
The Bureau of Mines used high-temperature reduction roasting, magnetic separation, acid-leaching, and autoclave precipitation processes to recover iron and manganese from brown Cuyana range ores of Mi
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 4751 Effect Of High Pressures On The Explosibility Of Mixtures Of Ethane, Air. And Carbon Dioxide And Of Ethane, Air, And NitrogenBy R. E. Kennedy
The presence in air of combustible cases and vapors can constitute an extremely serious explosion hazard. This hazard is even greater when explosive mixtures are confined under high pressures, as the
Jan 1, 1950
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IC 9095 Safe Cleaning Of State Of Maine Filters Using EDTA-Type Chelating AgentsBy John E. Pahlman
An increasing number of gold and silver mining operations are employing cyanide solutions to effectively dissolve silver and gold from finely disseminated ores. Many of these operations use small, pac
Jan 1, 1986
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RI 8147 Steel From Urban WasteBy Willard L. Hunter
A series of steel heats, one low-alloy and nine carbon, was made by the Bureau of Mines in a 1-ton arc furnace from ferrous scrap from incinerated refuse, steel cans, and detinned steel cans, both alo
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 7754 Recovery Of Zinc, Copper, Silver, And Iron From Zinc Smelter ResidueBy H. E. Powell
This Bureau of Mines study describes two processes for recovering zinc, copper, silver, and iron from the magnetic fraction of a waste generated by the primary smelting of zinc in horizontal retort di
Jan 1, 1973
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RI 9019 - In Situ FT-IR Studies of Reactions of Activated Sphalerite With Aqueous Solutions of Potassium EthylxanthateBy S. C. Termes
The Bureau of Mines has used Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-1R) to study in situ reactions of aqueous solutions of potassium ethylxanthate with CU(II)-and Pb(II)-activated sphalerite plat
Jan 1, 1986
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RI 3958 Exploration of the Mohawk Zinc Prospect Pima, County, Ariz.By P. S. Haury
"INTRODUCTION Preliminary examinations of the Mohawk zinc prospect were made by John 14. Price and the author in July, August, and September 1943. Considerable quantities of oxidized lead and zinc min
Oct 1, 1946
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MLA 75-86 - Mineral Resources Of The King Hill Creek Study Area, Elmore County, Idaho ? SummaryBy Andrew M. Leszcykowski
In 1985 at the request of the Bureau of Land Management, personnel from the U.S. Bureau of Mines examined a 27,680-acre portion of the 30,420-acre King Hill Creek Wilderness Study Area (10-19-2) in or
Jan 1, 1986
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RI 3411 Tests Of A Barrier Using Rock Dust In Paper Bags ? Origin Of Investigation (b2f0b7a1-8053-4967-835e-c488203e033e)By H. P. Greenwald
About mid-December 1936, the safety director of a large coal corporation visited the authors at the Bureau's Experimental coal mine to discuss a rock-dust barrier he had invented primarily for us
Jan 1, 1938
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RI 3888 Routine Quantitative Analysis by X-Ray Diffraction,1. Photometric 2. Analytical MethodBy James W. Ballard, H. H. Schrenk
"The X-ray method of quantitative determination is advantageous because it permits determination of compounds rather -than ions or elements; for example, the direct determination of quartz in silicate
Jun 1, 1946