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Industrial Minerals - Some Economic Aspects of PerliteBy C. R. King
Most of the acid volcanic glasses such as obsidian, perlite, pitchstone, pumice, and pumicite (volcanic ash) are susceptible to some expansion if suddenly subjected to a suitably high temperature in a
Jan 1, 1950
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Industrial Minerals - Some Properties of Pseudowavellite from Florida (Correction p. 702)By W. L. Hill, W. H. Armiger, S. D. Gooch
The physical properties, chemical behavior under thermal treatment, and fertilizer value of fluorine-containing pseudowavellite (hydrous calcium aluminum phosphate) that occurs as phosphate clay admix
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Some Properties of Pseudowavellite from Florida (Correction p. 702)By W. L. Hill, W. H. Armiger, S. D. Gooch
The physical properties, chemical behavior under thermal treatment, and fertilizer value of fluorine-containing pseudowavellite (hydrous calcium aluminum phosphate) that occurs as phosphate clay admix
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Special Methods for the Beneficiation of Glass SandBy Paul M. Tyler
Higher freight rates and better methods of beneficiation now may make it more economical to open inferior deposits closer to a glass factory than to work higher-grade deposits farther away. Natu
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Special Methods for the Beneficiation of Glass SandBy Paul M. Tyler
Higher freight rates and better methods of beneficiation now may make it more economical to open inferior deposits closer to a glass factory than to work higher-grade deposits farther away. Natu
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Sulphur Recovery from Low-Grade Surface DepositsBy Thomas P. Forbath
THE sudden realization that known sulphur reserves amenable to mining by the Frasch hot water process are nearing exhaustion focused attention on widely scattered surface deposits throughout the world
Jan 1, 1954
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Industrial Minerals - Suspension Preheating of Dry Pulverized MaterialsBy G. K. Engelhart
A multi-stage counterflow process developed in Germany preheats dry pulverized portland cement raw materials held in suspension in rotary kiln waste gases. Capacity of the first kiln installed for thi
Jan 1, 1955
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Industrial Minerals - Synthetic Mullite as a Ceramic Raw MaterialBy K. W. Smith, E. A. Thomas
Various grades of synthetic mullite have been developed in recent years to replace or supplement natural sources of mullite deriued from the mullite group of minerals consisting of sillimanite, kyanit
Jan 1, 1961
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Industrial Minerals - The Calaveras Cement Co. Dust SuitBy W. W. Mein
IN March 1949 the Calaveras Cement Co. was sued by five landowners whose properties are located in the vicinity of the plant. These landowners—all of them cattle ranchers—sued for dust damages of $120
Jan 1, 1952
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Industrial Minerals - The Domestic Graphite Supply ProblemBy E. N. Cameron
GRAPHITE has been included in U. S. lists of strategic minerals since the problem of mineral deficiencies was revealed during World War I. Since 1918 the domestic graphite industry has led a precariou
Jan 1, 1957
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Industrial Minerals - The Geiger Counter as a Control Tool in Processing Potassium-Bearing OresBy W. C. Knopf, G. Samsel
For several years International Minerals & Chem-ical Corp. has used a radiation method to assay potassium content of products from potash and feldspar beneficiation. The procedure is rapid, accurate,
Jan 1, 1959
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Industrial Minerals - The Grand Isle Mine: Freeport Sulphur Company’s Offshore Venture (Mining Engineering, Jun 1960, pg 578)By C. O. Lee, Z. W. Bartlett, R. H. Feierabend
The Grand Isle sulfur mine is located in the Gulf of Mexico, approximately seven miles off the coast of Grand Isle, Jefferson Parish, La. The deposit is on acreage covered by oil, gas, and mineral lea
Jan 1, 1961
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Industrial Minerals - The Mining, Milling, and Processing of PerliteBy Fred D. Gustafson
With the postwar emergency for new housing and for new industrial buildings, much research has been done on lightweight aggregates for use in concrete and plaster. The trend toward lighter weight aggr
Jan 1, 1950
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Industrial Minerals - The Occurrence and Mining of Solid Bitumens in Western Argentina (Mining Tech., Nov. 1948, TP 2480)By Howard A. Meyerhoff
In western Argentina, in the Province of Mendoza and the Territory of Neuquen, there is a series of solid bitumen deposits which are claimed to be the most extensive in the world. In a linear belt 500
Jan 1, 1949
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Industrial Minerals - The Production of Sodium Sulphate from Natural Brines at Monahans, TexasBy Ross C. Anderson, William I. Weisman
THE manufacture of anhydrous sodium sulphate or salt cake from natural deposits in the United States has been in general somewhat of a marginal undertaking. Competition from foreign sources and from l
Jan 1, 1954
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Industrial Minerals - Use of Isopachous and Related Maps in the Florida Phosphate DistrictBy Thomas E. Wayland
AN isopachous map is one on which lines connect points of equal thickness of a given unit. This type of map is used by the Florida Phosphate Project of the U. S. Geological Survey to represent the eco
Jan 1, 1952
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Industrial Minerals 1986 - MicaBy J. P. Ferro, W. H. Stewart
Wet ground and dry muscovite mica continued to be the most commercially significant types of mica in the US. Canada's phlogopite mica and some US deposits of sericite mica have also contributed t
Jan 7, 1987
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Industrial Minerals 1994Along with kyanite and sillimanite, andalusite forms part of the sillimanite industrial minerals trimorphous alumina-silicate group. Theoretically, andalusite contains about 60% A1203 and 40% Si02, wi
Jan 1, 1995
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - BoronBy S. Hamilton
Borates are essential to life, and to many products that are essential to an acceptable standard of living. They occur naturally in seawater at an average concentration of five milligrams of boron per
Jan 1, 2005
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Industrial Minerals 2004 – Dimension StoneBy L. Mead
Dimension stone is a natural stone (granite, marble, limestone, sandstone and slate) that can be quarried, cut and shaped to conform to acceptable industry standards for size, consistency and durabili
Jan 1, 2005