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Colorimetric Determination of Tungsten in Scheelite Ores and Mill ProductsMost analysts determining tungsten trioxide in low grade samples are aware that colorimetric procedures do not possess the inherent disadvantages of gravimetric methods operating on milligram quantiti
Jan 1, 1958
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Coloring Plastics With Inorganic PigmentsBy Michael Ferrell
The primary reason pigments are used in plastics is to impart a desired color to the plastic. Color is one of the more important assign considerations associated with today's market oriented soci
Jan 1, 1985
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Colosseum Gold Mine Clark Mountain Range, San Bernardino County, CaliforniaBy D. L. McClure
Gold mineralization at the Colosseum Mine is submicroscopic and associated with pyrite. Pyrite occurs in breccia clasts, replacing dolomite, in crackle breccia veinlets with traces of quartz, and as d
Jan 1, 1988
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Colowyo Coal Company Implements Blast Casting Into Multiple Seam OperationBy Keith L. Bockelman
The Colowyo mine is a unique surface coal mining operation because it is a multiple seam pit. Using a combination of a shovel-truck and dragline operation, Colowyo mines 8 seams of coal to a depth of
Jan 1, 1985
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Columbia Gardens"Nestling in a little valley, right under the shadow of the rugged peaks of the Rocky Mountains and just over the great Continental Divide on the Pacific Slope, are Columbia Gardens, Butte's one rare
Jan 1, 1913
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Columbia Slough Consolidation Conduit, A Soft Ground Tunnel, Portland, OregonBy S. Michael Feroz, Paul Gribbon, Jan Rosholt
Approximately six billion gallons of combined sewage are discharged annually into Willamette River and Columbia Slough through Portland’s combined sewer system. The Columbia Slough Consolidation Condu
Jan 1, 1999
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Columbia Steel Corporation OperationsBy W. R. Phibbs
THE Columbia Steel Corporation, organized in 1922, and taken over by the United States Steel Corporation on Feb. l, 1930, is operating one blast furnace at Ironton, Utah, which was started on April 30
Jan 1, 1930
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Columbia University PressColumbia University, School of Mines, New York, N. Y. For many years the School of Mines published a Quarterly containing many valuable papers on mining, geology and kindred subjects, but the public
Jan 1, 1933
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Columbium-an outlookBy Edgar A. Manker
"Today's market for columbium has only developed in the last two decades, and in this sense it is ""newer"" than molybdenum, vanadium and most other steel alloying elements. In this short period,
Jan 1, 1981
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Columbium-Uranium Deposits at North Bay, OntarioBy J. E. Gill
Discovered in 1952, the deposits have been explored by diamond drilling on and near a group of islands in lake Nipissing and from under-ground workings. The ore mineral is a uranian pyrochlore. It occ
Jan 1, 1957
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Columbus Circle Station Complex - History and RehabilitationBy Aram Grigoryan
This paper addresses historical aspects and construction sequencing of the subway complex under Columbus Circle in Manhattan; the structural elements of the rehabilitation and new construction; and th
Jan 1, 2008
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Columbus Paper - Charpy Impact Test as Applied to Aluminum Alloys (with Discussion)By E. H. Dix
The success of the Charpy impact test in the steel industry has led those interested in aluminum alloys to investigate the possible application of this test to aluminum and its alloys. In this paper a
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - Chemical and Electrochemical Problems Involved in New Cornelia Copper Co.’s Leaching Process (with Discussion)By Henry S. Mackay
The interesting paper recently submitted by Messrs. Tobelmann and Potter1 shows that chemical problems have developed which are of great interest in this new and important branch of metallurgy. Those
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - Coke and Byproducts as Fuels for Metals MeltingBy F. W. Sperr
The byproduct coke oven is the most important artificial source of fuels for metals melting. Its products are solid, liquid, and gaseous in form. The amount of coke and primary byproducts obtained per
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - Colloidal State in Metals and Alloys (with Discussion)By Jerome Alexander
The object of this paper is to show that many of the important phenomena of metals and alloys are due to the facts that, at some stage, metals and alloys, or some of their constituents, are in a collo
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - Investigation of Brass Foundry Fluxes (with Discussion)By W. B. Vietz, C. W. Hill, T. P. Thomas
FLUXES, in general, may be classified according to their use as soldering, foundry or casting, and metallurgical and the chemistry of their action follows quite closely this division. The term foundry
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - Laboratory Testing of Sands, Cores and Core Binders (with Discussion)By F. L. Wolf, A. A. Grubb
There is a tendency on the part of practical foundrymen to accept with reluctance the results of tests on sands, binders, and such materials made in the chemical laboratory alone. They feel that such
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - New Process for Making Fifteen Per Cent. Phosphor-copper (with Discussion)By P. E. Demmler
Phosphorus combines with copper in various proportions, forming true alloys, some of which are of commercial importance. These materials find wide application as deoxidizers and as a means of introduc
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - Nickel-chromium AlloysBy Leon O. Hart
The nickel-chromium alloys of importance are those containing iron and those free from iron. The most important alloys containing iron, with regard to high tonnage, are the nickel-chromium steels. Str
Jan 1, 1921
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Columbus Paper - Physical Tests on Sheet Nickel Silver (with Discussion)By Philip Davidson, Wm. B. Price
The object of this paper is to present, a survey of some of the physical properties of sheet nickel silver when subjected to cold rolling and when annealed at temperatures extending from 350" C. throu
Jan 1, 1921