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"Gadgets" Pulp Sample DividerIn submitting the accompanying sketch and description, the writer mentions that he has found this "gadget" a useful assay office adjunct.He believes that some millmen and assayers have been
Jan 1, 1939
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IC 7044 Installation Of High-Tension Power Circuits In Coal Mines ? IntroductionBy E. J. Gleim
In April 1932, the Bureau of Mines published Information Circular 6595, entitled "Data in Reference to Installation of Cables in Shafts and Boreholes", in which were described methods followed in vari
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3481 Bureau Of Mines - A.P.I. Pressure Core Barrel (Progress Report On Its Design And Development) ? IntroductionBy D. B. Taliaferro
[Recovery of core specimens from subsurface formations and their subsequent analysis are important aids in efficient development and operation of oil and gas fields. Core specimen first were obtained
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Fracture of Steels at Elevated Temperatures after Prolonged Loading.By R. H. Thielemann, E. R. Parker
The conventional short-time tensile test provides a reliable means of predicting the sustained load-carrying capacity of steels only when the temperature is such that continuous plastic flow does not
Jan 1, 1939
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Cement and Rock-Wool MaterialsBy Donald F. MacDonald
THE cement plant nearest to Nova Scotia is not far from Montreal. Cement is a heavy product which, because of its relatively low value, cannot stand a high freight charge without unduly enhancing its
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3435 Some Asphalts From Oregon Basin (Wyoming) Crude Oil ? IntroductionBy K. E. Stanfield
Asphalts from. Wyoming "black oils" are being studied at the Petroleum Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Laramie, Wyo., in cooperation with the University of Wyoming. These black oils are c
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3474 Properties Of A Petroleum-Reservoir Liquid And Its Residua With Applications Of The Data To Production Problems ? IntroductionBy Kenneth Eilerts
[Efficient and econonic production of ?etroleum requiros knowledge of the propertios of rescrvoir fluids a:$. their characterintics of flow throayh porous forclntions. The cllanga in propertie s and f
Jan 1, 1939
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IC 7053 Heat Liberated In The Low-Temperature Oxidation Of Anthracite ? IntroductionBy G. S. Scott
The investigation of the causes, behavior, and control of anthracite mine fires, which the Bureau of Mines has been carrying on has yielded several publications directly applicable to mine-fire proble
Jan 1, 1939
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Reserves - Estimate of World Oil ReservesBy R. V. Whetsel, V. R. Garfias
As pointed out in previous studies, estimates of petroleum reserves if they are to be of value must not only presuppose a clear understanding of what is actually meant by reserves but must be subject
Jan 1, 1939
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Instrument Control of Open-Hearth FurnacesBy E. T. W. Bailey
A HISTOR Y of the development and application of instruments, from the simplest U gauge to a modern indicating recording controller, would contain many interesting accounts of difficulties experienced
Jan 1, 1939
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Ohio for 1938By Dewitt T. Ring
Lack of reliable detailed production figures for earlier years, together with the loose nomenclature in reference to producing horizons and the application of the term "field" without any definite mea
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3465 Methods Of Rock-Dusting American Coal Mines ? Introduction (ebff49c8-8566-4bb9-8314-d79df6ddf769)By J. J. Forbes
Investigations by the Bureau of Mines and by mining-research departments of European countries have established definitely the value of rock-dusting to prevent or limit the propagation of coal-mine ex
Jan 1, 1939
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Expansion of the Quebec Metal Mining IndustryBy J. E. Gill
THE 1938 season was marked by a distinct lull in exploratory activity in the Province of Quebec. Quebec was not unique in this respect, but the condition appears to have been more acute here than in m
Jan 1, 1939
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Radial Filtration of Drilling MudsBy Milton Williams
IT is generally recognized that fluid is lost from rotary drilling mud s to permeable strata during normal drilling operations;1,2,3 but that this fluid is the filtrate from the mud, rather than the m
Jan 1, 1939
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IC 7087 Investigation Of Electrical Equipment, Safety Lamps, And Gas Detectors For Safety ? IntroductionBy L. C. IlsLey
Investigations for safety of electrically operated mine equipment, safety lamps, and gas detectors are made at the Pittsburgh Experiment Station in accordance with published regulations termed "schedu
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3465 Methods Of Rock-Dusting American Coal Mines ? IntroductionBy J. J. Forbes
Investigations by the Bureau of Mines and by mining-research departments of European countries have established definitely the value of rock-dusting to prevent or limit the propagation of coal-mine ex
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3435 Some Asphalts From Oregon Basin (Wyoming) Crude Oil ? Introduction (6bcbaf94-4289-4e97-9a97-fe6b74e63bf6)By K. E. Stanfield
Asphalts from. Wyoming "black oils" are being studied at the Petroleum Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Laramie, Wyo., in cooperation with the University of Wyoming. These black oils are c
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3437 Progress Reports - Metallurgical Division - 31. Ore-Dressing Studies - Flotation Of Southern Illinois Lead-Zinc-Fluorspar OresBy J. B. Clemmer
Fluorspar is one of the most important nonmetallic minerals and is used extensively in the metallurgical, ceramic, cement, and chemical industries. The steel industry consumes most of it, but as the M
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3481 Bureau Of Mines - A.P.I. Pressure Core Barrel (Progress Report On Its Design And Development) ? Introduction (89da8445-1c95-47a6-a11f-7c7795d0b151)By D. B. Taliaferro
[Recovery of core specimens from subsurface formations and their subsequent analysis are important aids in efficient development and operation of oil and gas fields. Core specimens first were obtained
Jan 1, 1939
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Practices And Methods Of Preventing And Treating Crude-Oil Emulsions - IntroductionBy G. B. Shea
Among the many engineering problems directly related to conservation in the petroleum industry, that of crude-oil emulsions continues to be important. Emulsions of water and oil always have constitute
Jan 1, 1939