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Telegram Sent To President Wilson
Feb. 5, 1917. To the President, Executive Mansion, Washington, D. C. We, the presidents of the national societies of Civil, Mining, Mechanical and Electrical Engineers and of the United Engineerin
Jan 3, 1917
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Teleprocessing - A Hot Line To Remote Data
By Alfred Weiss
The business world of tomorrow will experience a major change in its data communication systems, with the mineral industry being among those to feel the greatest impact of this change. This developmen
Jan 1, 1971
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Telfer - Australia's Newest Gold Mill (c27decb7-bf16-4dac-a144-a7851a8a1e95)
By C. Chamberlain
The Telfer Project, Australia's newest, largest, and most remote gold mine treats 480 kt of ore grading 9.33 g/t derived from open pit mining operations. Coarse gold is recovered by gravity c
Jan 1, 1983
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Tellurium and Selenium, the Useless Elements
By Galen Clevenger
TELLURIUM has had the rare and unpleasant distinction of having fewer uses than any of the other common elements; indeed, it has had no regular or important uses. It is not only a useless and disagree
Jan 1, 1923
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TEM Measurement of Organic Sulfur in Coal Macerals
By C. A. Wert, K. C. Hsieh
Measurement has been made of the organic sulfur concentration in coal macerals using microanalytical techniques in the transmission electron microscope. This technique utilizes measurements of x-rays
Jan 1, 1985
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Temper Brittleness Of Plain Carbon Steels
By Leonard D. Jaffe, Donald C. Buffum
THE importance of temper brittleness in alloy steels has long been realized in Europe, In the United States recognition of its importance has developed within the last several years. Many brittle fail
Jan 1, 1948
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Temperature
By Joseph Ames
THERE are two distinct questions associated with the concept of temperature: one is practical, the other is theoretical. Our fundamental ideas of temperature come from our senses; we know what we mean
Jan 9, 1919
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Temperature Compensation Of Old Type Askania Magnetometers
By T. Koulomzine
The theory of the Askania magnetometer, as well as a complete discussion of all factors influencing magnetometer readings, is very ably described by J. Wallace Joyce. We will assume that the reader is
Jan 1, 1949
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Temperature Conversion Tables.
By Leonard Waldo
(New York Meeting, February, 1911.) THE recent and rapid development of the physics of engineering materials at temperatures as low as that of liquid air and as high is that of the electric are, has
Jan 4, 1913
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Temperature Conversion Tables. (202bb6cb-974d-4e78-be7d-ee424cd7ef22)
Discussion of the paper of Leonard Waldo, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1911, and printed in Bulletin No. 76, April, 1913, pp. 555 to 559. HERBERT HAAS, San Francisco, Cal. (communica
Jan 5, 1913
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Temperature Effect On Salt Dissolution Rate
By Ahmad Saberian
Five salt samples 20 to 40 cm tall, sealed on all sides except one, were exposed to a series of dissolution tests in various brine solutions and at different temperatures. Solvents were in the 50 to 9
Jan 1, 1985
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Temperature Gradients Through Composite Carbon Columns And Their Application To Blast-Furnace Linings
By M. R. Hatfield, F. J. Vosburgh
IN a recent article,† it was shown that in the blast furnaces in Germany that are lined with carbon blocks no cooling plates are used, and that shower cooling is employed on the hearth and bosh sectio
Jan 1, 1941
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Temperature Measurements in Bessemer and Open-Hearth Practice
By George Burgess
I. INTRODUCTION THE suggestion has often been made that it would be highly desirable, at least for certain grades of steel, to be able to control more certainly, by pyrometric measurement or otherwis
Jan 2, 1917
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Temperature Measurements in Bessemer and Open-Hearth Practice (778c4ce0-21df-44c2-a07f-a033ac00d9f8)
By G. K. Burgess
J. W. RICHARDS, South Bethlehem, Pa.-I think my affections are still rather with the radiation pyrometer than the optical pyrometer, for practical use, and I wish that Prof. Burgess would use the two
Jan 4, 1917
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Temperature Measurements in Bessemer and Open-Hearth Practice (8aa378c2-8f7f-4958-9286-3cc1389d44a3)
HENRY M. HOWE, Bedford Hills, N. Y. (communication to the Secretary *).-Dr. Burgess would add to the value of this important paper if he would give us the carbon content of the steel made in the sever
Jan 6, 1917
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Temperature Measurements Of Incandescent Gas Mantles
By Herbert Ives
THE incandescent gas mantle is of considerable interest from the standpoint of temperature measurement because it presents a series of apparent contradictions to the established laws of radiation on w
Jan 9, 1919
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Temperature Of A Burning Cigar
By T. S. Jr. Sligh
OF all the qualities that are essential in a good cigar tobacco none is quite so important as the burn. This term is general and includes many points, the most important of which are evenness of burn,
Jan 9, 1919
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Temperature of a Burning Cigar - Discussion
W. P. WHITE,* Washington, D. C. (written discussion?).-The authors seem to have proved that for a phenomenon as irregular as the one they were investigating there was no perceptible conduction effect
Jan 12, 1919
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Temperature Problems In Foundry And Melting Room
By John Goheen
CONSIDERABLE work has been done in developing a pyrometer to measure the temperature of molten brasses, bronzes, and aluminum in the crucible. On account of the high melting points and the amount of z
Jan 11, 1921
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Temperature Surveys in Oil Wells
By C. V. Millikan
TEMPERATURE measurement in wells is an old practice and geothermal gradients have been of interest to geologists for many years.1,2 Their application to the operation of oil wells is a more recent pra
Jan 1, 1940