Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Canadian Gold Mining ReviewedBy Balmer Neilly
In these days of arrested prosperity, when patience is tried and the future but dimly outlined, Canada's gold mining industry stands out as a beacon light shedding its rays of hope and confidence
Jan 1, 1932
-
RI 3151 Use Of Micropyrometer For High-Temperature Melting-Point Investigations (5154fa11-9a46-44db-af71-95b4d00428da)By G. R. Fitterer
In the manufacture of steel by any process the refining period involves the partial elimination of the metalloids carbon, manganese, phosphorus, and silicon, by virtue of their reactions with ferrous
Jan 1, 1932
-
Metallogenesis and Crustal TheoryBy J. S. DeLury
Introduction The problems of metallogenesis are largely related to those concerning the origin of igneous rocks, which, in turn, are involved with the question of crustal mechanics. Many ore-bodies a
Jan 1, 1932
-
RI 3148 Concentration Of The Rake-Discharge From A Bowl Classifier In A Washing Plant Of The Mesabi Range, MinnesotaBy Fred D. DeVaney
The Mesabi iron district of Minnesota has a potential production of over 50 million tons of iron ore annually. The large shipments of ore each year are gradually depleting the reserves, and if the pre
Jan 1, 1932
-
The Geological Survery of CanadaBy F. W. Gray
Foreword: It is not my purpose, in this address, to write the history of the Geological Survey of Canada, which has from time to time been reviewed by the officers of the Survey itself, and by men m
Jan 1, 1932
-
IC 6652 Mining Methods And Costs At The Hart Spur Pit Of The Fort Worth Sand & Gravel Co. (Inc.), Fort Worth, Tex. ? IntroductionBy Thomas E. Popplewell
This paper is one of a series being prepared for and published by the United States Bureau of Mines describing the mining and treatment methods and costs obtained in sand and gravel plants throughout
Jan 1, 1932
-
IC 6585 Economic Size Of Metal-Mine Airways ? IntroductionBy G. E. McElroy
Changes in existing airway and fan-installation conditions offer the most common opportunities for effecting economical operation of mine ventilating systems, but the largest possibilities for securin
Jan 1, 1932
-
Advance in Mechanization in Collieries of the Sydney Coal-FieldBy A. S. MacNeil
In the operation of any colliery, a factor of prime importance is power, of which there are three sources available--man, horse, and mechanical. It is obvious that man-power is by far the most expensi
Jan 1, 1932
-
RI 3173 Some Methods Of Separating Oil And Water In West Texas Fields, And The Disposal Of Oil-Field Brines In The Hendricks Oil Field, TexasBy R. E. Heithecker
The separation of enormous quantities of water produced with the oil in some West Texas fields necessitated the use of special equipment other than the regular lease tanks. Several methods were used w
Jan 1, 1932
-
The Division of Geology, Quebec Bureau of MinesBy John A. Dresser
At a meeting of the Montreal Branch of this Institute in the autumn of 1928, the Honorable J. E. Perrault, Minister of Mines for Quebec, announced his intention to enlarge the Bureau of Mines of Quebe
Jan 1, 1932
-
Developing a Utah ?Cold Mine?By Fleming, R. C.
ONE OF THE NEWEST developments of industry rising from the commercial application of scientific knowledge is in the making of solid carbon dioxide from the gas about 1925 the first efforts were made t
Jan 1, 1932
-
IC 6663 Pressure Losses Due To Bends And Area Changes In Mine Airways ? IntroductionBy G. E. McElroy
The purpose of tins paper is not to present new date on the pressure losses due to bends and chances of area in mine openings through which air flows, but rather to correlate existing data, determined
Jan 1, 1932
-
IC 6616 Mica-Mining Methods, Costs, And Recoveries At No. 10 And No. 21 Mines Of The Spruce Pine Mica Co., Spruce Pine, N. C. ? IntroductionBy H. M. Urban
This paper, one of a series being prepared for and published by the United States Bureau of Mines on methods and costs of mining at various mica mines in the United States, describes the methods now i
Jan 1, 1932
-
Papers - Effect of Heat Treatment on Corrosion Resistance, of Stainless Iron (With Discussion)By Clarence G. Merritt
Stainless iron, as mild stainless steel is usually called, an alloy ranging from 11.50 to 15.00 per cent chromium with carbon under 0.12 per cent, has been considered to be not appreciably affected in
Jan 1, 1932
-
IC 6594 Sampling And Exploration By Means Of Hammer Drills - IntroductionBy John B. Knaebel
Hammer machines are now widely used for underground sampling and exploration. Their application to such work can be divided into two classes - sampling and testing with ordinary drilling equipment to
Jan 1, 1932
-
RI 3189 Falls Of Roof And Coal In The Book Cliffs And Wasatch Plateau Coal Fields Of UtahBy Herbert Tomlinson
The United States Bureau of Mines has engaged in a study of the conditions under which coal mine accidents, resulting in the loss of life, limb, or time to the injured person, occur from falls of roof
Jan 1, 1932
-
Uniform Cost Accounting in the Crushed Stone IndustryBy William Hilliard
IN any manufacturing business, it is of vital importance that the management should know the exact cost of the units of production. Without such knowledge, a company can sell blindly in the open marke
Jan 1, 1932
-
Papers - Status of Scientific Classification of American Coals (With Discussion)By W. T. Thom
RegaRding the elements necessarily involved .in working out a scientific scheme of classification, Stansfield and Sutherland, (94)† quoting Grout, (34) make the following statement: All bases (for
Jan 1, 1932
-
Reverberatory Smelting of Raw Concentrates at the International Smelter, Miami, ArizonaBy P. D. I. Honeyman
CHANGING trends in concentration, involving regrinding with the subsequent production of a finely divided, high-grade flotation product, presents a real problem to the modern copper smelter. In the tr
Jan 1, 1932
-
RI 3157 Washability Data On Certain Coal Beds Of Alabama With Special Reference To Sulphur Elimination ? IntroductionBy B. W. Gandrud
This report, consisting mostly of float-and-sink data and washability curves, has been prepared in connection with an exhaustive study of coal preparation in Alabama conducted, by the U, S. Bureau of
Jan 1, 1932