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Contributions To The Data On Theoretical Metallurgy - IX. The Entropies Of Inorganic Substances. Revision (1940) Of Data And Methods Of Calculation - IntroductionBy K. K. Kelley
The first bulletin (245)3 in this series, which appeared in 1932, summarized the entropy values then available for the elements and inorganic compounds, results being listed for some 150 substances. I
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7186 Accident Experience At Pebble-Phosphate Operations In Florida 1930-40 ? IntroductionBy Frank E. Cash
Data on the accident experience of the pebble-phosphate industry in Florida for 1930 and 1940 are combined in this report with statistics for the 9-year period 1930-38, inclusive, which were published
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3571 Carbonaceous Cation And Anion Exchangers In Water Treatment ? Introduction (69a27b23-5b88-49c8-9cba-2d7fe788256a)By S. J. Broderick
[The discovery in 1934 that carbonaceous materials, such as coal, peat, and lignite, when treated with concentrated sulfuric acid, were given cation or bate-exchange properties opened up a field of ne
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3585 Carbon Monoxide And Particulate Matter In Air Of Holland Tunnel And Metropolitan New York ? Introduction (2a735537-e6e8-4f25-accf-d8924c0f4f38)By W. P. Yant
[This report describes results of a study bf the carbon monoxide and particulate matter in the air of the Holland Tunnel and metropolitan New York made by the Bureau of Mines (which had participated i
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3600 Progress Reports - Metallurgical Division - 50. Annual Report Of The Metallurgical Division, Fiscal Year 1941By R. S. Dean
The brief resume of the activities of the Metallurgical Division that appears annually in its progress reports series serves a useful purpose by making available a rather comprehensive but concise rec
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3569 Progress Reports -Metallurgical Division ? 46. Ore-Testing Studies (Primarily Precious Metals) ? IntroductionBy Edmund S. Leaver
[In previous reports5/ of ore-testing studies standard methods of conducting; test with precious-metal ores selected as representative of certain mining districts were discussed in considerable detail
Jan 1, 1941
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Open-Cut Metal Mining - IntroductionBy E. D. Gardner
This bulletin, which discusses open-cut mining at the metal mines of the United States, is the last of a series of such papers by the Bureau of Mines describing the principal methods of mining.4 Open
Jan 1, 1941
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Coal-Mine Accidents In The United States 1938 - IntroductionBy W. W. Adams
Every man-hour of work performed in and about the coal mines of the United States had a 2-percent heavier death load from accidents in 1938 than in 1937. This is an unorthodox way of stating that the
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7182 Review Of Literature On Conditioning Air For Advancement Of Health And Safety In Mines - Part II. Need For Air Conditioning Indicated By Physical Quality Of Underground Air ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
This circular is part II of a series of papers reviewing the literature on air conditioning in mines with particular reference to the health, safety, and efficiency of employees. It deals with the phy
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 3556 Role Of Clay And Other Minerals In Oil-Well Drilling Fluids ? PrefaceBy A. George Stern
The literature dealing with the drilling of oil wells has become extensive during the last few years, and oil men can find much information relating to drilling muds in the technical literature of the
Jan 1, 1941
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Electrolytic Manganese and Its Potential Metallurgical UsesBy R. S. Dean
IN THE COURSE of its investigations directed toward providing strategic metals from domestic sources and toward utilizing power from Federal power projects in West, the Bureau of Mines concluded some
Jan 1, 1941
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Developments In Ball-Mill Grinding Practices At New Cornelia (Technical Publication No. 1361)By L. M. Barker, E. G. Lewis
THE literature of milling is replete with papers devoted to the subject of ball milling, all of which no doubt have contributed in one way or another to progress in that art. In this paper reference w
Jan 1, 1941
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Los Angeles Meeting, Petroleum DivisionBy AIME AIME
FEATURES of the second fall meeting of the Petroleum Division for 1941, held at the Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles, Oct. 29-30, were the forum on the Paloma Plan on Thursday after- noon, the large atte
Jan 1, 1941
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Government and the EngineerBy AIME AIME
ENGINEERS in the past have been largely associated with private enterprise and there has been a considerable tendency on the part of some members of our profession to depreciate government service for
Jan 1, 1941
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Coal Mining Is Getting SaferBy D. L. McElroy
SAFETY in coal mining received especial attention by the public in general and the mining industry in particular during 1940 and early in 1941, owing primarily to the six explosion disasters which occ
Jan 1, 1941
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The1 ½ Billion-Dollar Scrap Metal IndustryBy J. F. Ednie
SCRAP metals to the value of more than a billion and a half dollars were recovered in the United States in 1939 for further use in industry. Few people have any true conception of the magnitude of the
Jan 1, 1941
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Precious and Semiprecious Stones in IndustryBy Sydney H. Ball
AMERICAN consumption of industrial diamonds has increased five fold in the past 25 years and today accounts for 15 to 20 percent of the world's sale of rough diamonds. In another decade the value
Jan 1, 1941
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Geography and the Mining IndustryBy LEWIS F. THOMAS
MINING geologists and mining engineer, rarely give due thought to the geography of mining deposits. They realize, it is true that what may be ore in one place would be only worthless rock in another b
Jan 1, 1941
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Metal and Mineral Shortages and Substitutions in National DefenseBy Frank T. Sisco
SHORTAGES of metals and minerals and substitution of less critical materials for those in which a virtual famine exists received detailed and frank discussion at a recent conference in Washington call
Jan 1, 1941
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Gold or Strategic Minerals: Which Do We Need Most?By Donald H. McLauqhlin
ITEM expressed in billions of dollars have become so commonplace these day- that a mere statement of the latest figures for the country s gold reserve scarcely conveys m adequate sense of the immensit
Jan 1, 1941