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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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Mechanization Continues to Cut Coal Mining CostsBy R. E. Salvoti
IN underground coal mining, the increasing trend towards mechanical methods is ever apparent. Figures for 1939 showed that 28 per cent of the total bituminous coal production was mined mechanically 19
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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Mining Geology: Today and TomorrowBy AIME AIME
APOCRYPHAL, no doubt, but widely entertained is the proposition that top-flight mining geologists never agree with each other on anything. Being rugged individualists, they frequently seem intolerant
Jan 1, 1941
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Production EngineeringBy F. B. Plummer
PROGRESS during 1940 in oil-production technology has been confined largely to a steady advancement in practices inaugurated in previous years, rather than the introduction of any new startling proce
Jan 1, 1941
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Foreign ProductionBy F. B. Plummer
PRODUCING operations abroad during 1940 were shrouded in the fog of war. Little, if any, concrete information is available, and the data that issue from the belligerent countries are too frequently di
Jan 1, 1941
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Eugene McAuliffe, President, A.I.M.E., 1942By AIME AIME
EUGENE McAULIFFE will be the fifty-ninth man elected President of the Institute. Looking back to the first President, David Thomas, and reading Dr. Raymond eulogy of him, written eleven years after li
Jan 1, 1941
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Petroleum Transportation in a World at WarBy Eugene Holman
UINQUESTIONABLY the petroleum industry not only can supply the world's present oil requirements but even can meet a considerable increase in demand if it should come. The United States produced l
Jan 1, 1941
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Aviation in MiningBy W. E. D. Stokes
WHEN history is written, the year of the blitzkrieg will go down as giving aviation its greatest impetus. No perceptible drop in military business, even with cessation of hostilities abroad, seems lik
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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Mineral Industry EducationBy William R. Chedsey
ALTHOUGH few changes can be reported in educational methods at the mineral technology schools during 1940, other events have taken place of direct interest to, and that will have a profound effect upo
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
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No Real Scarcity of Lead LikelyBy Francis H. Brownell
During the 1920's lead consumption in the United States reached the highest average total ever known. For the ten-year period 1921-'30, it was slightly over 600,000 tons per year, or say 50,
Jan 1, 1941
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Oil Discovery Rate Depends on Price of CrudeBy Wallace E. Pratt
TO SERVE their primary function of balancing supply with demand. crude-oil prices must not only return full cost plus a reasonable earning to the efficient producer but they must also offer an additio
Jan 1, 1941
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Plenty of Oil for National DefenseBy JOHN R. SUMAN
OVERWHELMING proof of the importance of oil in a modern national economy is afforded by the present European War. Treat¬ies and national boundaries have been cynically violated to secure greater supp
Jan 1, 1941
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Commercial Definitions of Industrial MineralsBy PAUL M. Tyier
NOW that analytical chemistry has gone so far to debunk early misconceptions about minerals, the fact that the light of exact knowledge still fails to illuminate many dark corners is often overlooked.
Jan 1, 1941
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The Aluminum SituationBy Herbert A. Franke
ANY analysis of the aluminum situation, particularly of the factors involved in the current shortage of the metal, must consider the rapid march of events since the Munich fiasco of September 1938. At
Jan 1, 1941