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Washington Paper - The Testing of Gas-ProducersBy Samuel S. Wyer
The following description of methods for conducting gas-producer tests is probably the first attempt to give the subject an analytical, thorough and comprehensive treatment. In some cases where tes
Jan 1, 1906
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Washington Paper - The United States Prototype Standards of Weight and MeasureBy T. C. Mendenhall
All persons, actively engaged in your profession, must have a natural interest in the subject of weights and measures. All members of the engineering profession have to do with operations of weighing
Jan 1, 1890
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Washington Paper - The Work of the United States Geological Survey in Relation to the Mineral Resources of the United StatesBy Charles D. Walcott
Jan 1, 1901
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Washington Paper - What Steel IsBy Frederick Prime
At the last meeting of the Institute, Mr. A. L. Holley read a paper on "Steel," in which he proposes for it a definition so opposed to the one generally received, as to call for some remarks. Until wi
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Washington Survey - Causes In ConflictBy Freeman Bishop
Nothing has disturbed the copper- lead-zinc producers in recent years more than smelter tolerances set by some states. What hurt most, copper spokesmen told the Government, was the Government's o
Jan 1, 1971
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Washington Survey - Expropriation, Safety And Union Worries Simmer In CapitalBy Freeman Bishop
President Allende says he will expropriate all American investments in Chile and he's already well on the way to accomplishing this objective. What the average observer doesn't realize is th
Jan 1, 1971
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Washington Survey - Mineral Issues In FluxBy Freeman Bishop
Copper production has been under Government scrutiny for many years because it's known as a concentrated industry which in turn creates what many economists label administrative prices. Neither o
Jan 1, 1970
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Washington Survey - Nixon's New Bureau Choice Puts Pollution FirstBy Freeman Bishop
Having obviously cleared the way for fast confirmation by the Senate Interior Committee, the Administration recently named Elburt F. Osborn, vice president of Penn State University, as director of the
Jan 1, 1970
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Waste batteries – are you prepared for the coming avalanche?By D Bush, F Goddard
The electrification of Australian mine sites will see a boom in the use of batteries of all chemistries. Lead acid batteries, a traditional mainstay of the mining industry, are expected to nearly doub
Apr 16, 2024
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Waste Clay Ponds In Florida-Regulatory Status ReportBy S. Partney
Waste clay ponds are a necessary part of the phosphate rock beneficiation process. They are large, averaging a square mile in size; unsightly, in that they protrude 20 to 50 feet (6 -15 meters) above
Jan 1, 1998
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Waste Design In MiningBy M. Javier
Mining, waste is growing problem both physical accumulation and increasing toxic uncertainties it presents in the long run. Its value ?zero? is strictly calculated by economy. This mining model begs t
Jan 1, 2011
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Waste Disposal in the Pebble Phosphate Rock IndustryBy Randolph C. Specht
A two year study was made of the waste disposal of the pebble rock phosphate industry. Solid slimes are impounded in large settling areas and the process water is re-used. Clear effluent was not found
Jan 1, 1950
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Waste Disposal – Vital to Atomic Power DevelopmentBy John M. Warde, Raymond M. Richardson
What to do with atomic wastes is one of the major problems of the atomic age. Unlike other waste materials, these cannot be burned, evaporated, or filtered, and the transfer of radioactive material fr
Jan 5, 1955
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Waste Dump Leaching In A Tropical EnvironmentBy Paul Piercy
Bougainville Copper Limited operates a porphyry copper mine in Papua New Guinea. The waste dumps will contain 400 to 500 million tomes of rock at the end of nine life. The paper describes investigati
Jan 1, 1981
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Waste Heat Integration Potential Assessment through Exergy Analysis in an Aluminium Production FacilityBy Cassandre Nowicki, Louis Gosselin, Carl Duchesne
"Quebec's primary aluminium production industry consumes roughly 39 TWh of electricity per year and is accountable for roughly 7 million tons of CO2 equivalent. By tapping only a small portion of wast
Jan 1, 2012
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Waste Heat Recovery in the Aluminum Melting FurnacesBy John Norton
"This presentation will cover the physical properties of waste heat recovery. It is a two part presentation. The first deals with actually recovering the heat with new state of the art heat exchangers
Jan 1, 2011
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Waste Heat Reduction and Recovery Options for Metals IndustryBy Arvind Thekdi, Cynthia Belt2
"Waste heat from industrial operations in metals industry represents 20% to 50% of the total energy used in most manufacturing plants. Reduction and recovery of waste heat offers the most attractive a
Jan 1, 2011
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Waste Isolation In Salt CavitiesBy Larry Sevenker
On the basis of favorable salt characteristics, primarily compressive strength and impermeability, solution-mined cavities can provide structurally stable isolation chambers for waste. Solution mining
Jan 1, 1981
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Waste management: A materials management/product stewardship approachBy Redhead Robert J.
"In 1991, the Canadian Council of Ministers for the Environment (CCME) charged its Waste Management Task Group with developing a nationally coordinated strategy to measure, monitor, and achieve the ob
Jan 1, 1996
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Wasting a Valuable Natural Resource - Mine Recovery of Bituminous Coal Could Be Increased Greatly If the Currently Uneconomic Tonnage Were SubsidizedBy Howard N. Eavenson
WASTE of coal, or perhaps more properly the percentage of its recovery in mining, has keenly interested me during an experience of over a half century in coal mining. In the early part of that time an
Jan 1, 1946