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IC 6331 Cobalt ? IntroductionBy Paul M. Tyler
One by one new metals come to share the burden of modern industry. Long before the Christian era potters and glass workers employed fine and costly blue pigments that contained cobalt. Cobalt blue cla
Jan 1, 1930
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A revised conversion factor relating respirable dust concentrations measured by 10 mm Dorr-Oliver nylon cyclones operated at 1.7 and 2.0 L min-1By Steven J. Page
Accurate measurement of workplace respirable dust concentration is an essential step in eliminating lung disease in any occupational setting. In the United States (U.S.) coal mining industry, this mea
Jan 1, 2009
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RI 8150 Magnesium Oxysulfate Cement Sealant in Coal MinesBy Jack E. Fraley
Magnesium oxysulfate cement has been specially formulated as a sealant in underground coal mines for reducing sloughing of shale roofs and coal ribs, for reducing air losses through block stoppings, f
Jan 1, 1976
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IC 7755 Rock Dusting And Sampling - Including Wet Rock Dusting, At The Bureau Of Mines Experimental Coal Mine ? IntroductionBy Irving Hartmann
Modern mechanized mining with high-speed machines, multiple-entry systems, multiple blasting, high-velocity air currents, and rapid haulage has brought many economic benefits and has on the whole enha
Jan 1, 1956
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Contributions To The Data On Theoretical Metallurgy ? VIII. The Thermodynamic Properties Of Metal Carbides And Nitrides - IntroductionBy K. K. Kelley
The collection and correlation of thermodynamic data concerning substances of metallurgical interest have constituted one of the major activities of the Pacific Experiment Station of the Bureau of Min
Jan 1, 1937
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IC 6601 Mining Methods And Costs At The Mt. Hope Mine Of The Warren Foundry And Pipe Corporation, Mt. Hope, N. J. ? IntroductionBy J. R. Sweet
The paper describing the raining operations at the Mt. Hope mine, Mt. Lope, N. J., is one of a series being prepared by the United States Bureau of Mines on mining methods, practices, and costs of var
Jan 1, 1932
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OFR-81-79 Portable Low Profile Crusher For Underground Mining Applications - Phase I - DesignBy Carl R. Peterson
Development of reliable, portable, low headroom, hard rock crushers would improve the efficiency of most currently operated conveyor systems and make it possible to bring conveyor haulage closer to th
Jan 1, 1978
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RI 9300 - Chromite Recovery From Northern California Ores Using a Physical Concentration ProcessBy W. R. McDonald
Part of the U.S. Bureau of Mines mission is to supply the U.S. mineral industries with information that is useful in planning to meet the Nation's critical and strategic mineral needs if a nation
Jan 1, 1990
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Manganese-Copper Damping AlloysBy J. W. Jensen
EXTENSIVE research and development was performed on the manganese-copper vibration-damping alloys to determine the relationship between the properties of the alloys and variations in composition, fabr
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 4174 Tungsten Deposits in AlaskaBy Wilford S. Wright, Harold E. Heide, Robert L. Thorne, Neal M. Muir, Aner W. Erickson, Bruce I. Thomas
A program of investigation of strategic and critical minerals began in 1940 to examine and develop tungsten occurrences in the western United States and Alaska. During the years in which the nation wa
Jun 1, 1948
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RI 9569 - Leaching Pyrite From Coal Waste: Results of Diagnostic StudyBy Robert F. Chaiken
The U.S. Bureau of Mines conducted an experimental and theoretical study of coupled chemical kinetic and mass transport processes during leaching of pyrite from coal in a counterflow, "trickle-bed" co
Jan 1, 2010
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RI 2977 Rock barriers for coal minesBy G. S. Rice, H. P. Greenwald, H. C. Howarth
"""Rock-dust barriers""5 as they are termed in this country, are for the purpose of confining a coal-dust mine explosion to the limited area in which it originates. These barriers were first tested in
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 5326 Analyses Of Brines From Oil-Productive Formations In Oklahoma ? Introduction And SummaryBy Jack Wright
The analysis of water produced with crude petroleum has interested oil producers since inception of the industry. Records of the first analysis of mineralized water produced from an oil-productive for
Jan 1, 1957
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RI 6523 Experimental Production and Smelting of Prereduced Iron Ore PelletsBy P. L. Woolf, N. Bernstein, M. M. Fine
Continuous experimentation utilizing a 3- by 36 - foot rotary kiln was conducted to demonstrate the feasibility of simultaneous induration and reduction of magnetic taconite concentrate . Lignite , or
Jan 1, 1964
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RI 4155 Investigation of the Iron-Bearing Formation of the Western Gogebic Range, Iron County. WISBy Clyde L. Holmberg, Paul Zinner
"INTRODUCTION In view of the large tonnage of low-grade iron ore and iron-bearing material known to exist at the western limits of the Gogebic range, the Bureau of Mines undertook an investigation of
Dec 1, 1947
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MLA 20-88 - Mineral Resources Of The South Warner Contiguous Wilderness Study Area, Modoc County, California ? SummaryBy Michael S. Miller
In 1986 and 1987, at the request of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Bureau of Mines studied the nine separate parcels that comprise the 4,330-acre South Warner Contiguous Wilderness Study
Jan 1, 1988
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IC 6476 Milling Methods And Costs At The Argonaut Mill, Jackson, Calif. ? IntroductionBy Selim E. Woodworth
This paper, describing the milling practice on the Mother Lode as typified in the mill of the Argonaut Mining Co. at Jackson, Amador County, Calif., is one of a series prepared by the United States Bu
Jan 1, 1931
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RI 5763 Chlorination Of An Idaho Ilmenite - SummaryBy E. C. Perkins
The purpose of the research described in this report was to develop techniques for using ilmenite from domestic deposits for the production of titanium tetrachloride. The research was done by the Fede
Jan 1, 1961
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RI 4929 Refractory Properties Of Pacific Northwest Chromites ? Summary And ConclusionsBy H. J. Kelly
[This investigation of the refractory properties of seven Pacific Northwest chrome ores and concentrates has shown that five of the ores and one of the concentrates are suitable for making refractorie
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 3994 Pilot-Plant Investigations Production of Sponge Iron with Producer GasBy R. G. Knickerbocker, T. E. Evans, D. R. Torgeson
"INTRODUCTION Sponge iron is a product resulting from the reduction of an iron oxide at such a low temperature that fusion does not occur, and the reduced particles retain substantially the same shape
Dec 1, 1946