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Blast Furnace and Raw Materials - Physical Aspects of the Dust Catcher, Gas Washer and Precipitator on No. 3 Furnace at Carrie (Metals Technology, January 1943)
By C. P. Clingerman
The recent iastallation of a combination dust catcher, gas washer and precipitator at Carrie blast furnaces of the Homestead Steel Works has given very satisfactory results. The following description
Jan 1, 1943
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Deposits Of Quartz Crystal In Espirito Santo And Eastern Minas Gerais, Brazil
By Frederick L. Knouse
THE south border of Espirito Santo begins about 400 km. north of Rio de Janeiro and extends along the Atlantic Coast northward some 325 km. and inland 100 to 150 km. The area under consideration, wher
Jan 1, 1946
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Technical Notes - Some Useful Tables for Approximating Smooth Curves by Fifth-and-Lower Degree Polynomials
By H. H. Rachford, W. P. Schultz
The use of computing machines to solve physical problems has made it imperative to represent physical data in a form computing machines can use. Although curve-fitting is an old and well-practiced art
Jan 1, 1956
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - Some Observations on Ferrite-Carbide Aggregates in Alloy Steels
By E. S. Davenport
IT is indeed an honor and a responsibility to have been selected to present the thirty-fourth in this series of Henry Marion Howe lectures, established to perpetuate the memory of a great teacher and
Jan 1, 1958
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Reducing Failures in Metal Parts ? What a Practicing Metallurgist Needs to Know About Design
By Arthur E. Focke
IF a metallurgist employed in an industry producing mechanical parts or assemblies wishes to make the most of his opportunities he will be concerned with every use of metals in that industry. He will
Jan 1, 1947
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Silicates
By William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
The Silicates are m part strictly anhydrous, in part hydrous, as the zeolites and the amorphous clays, etc. Furthermore, a large number of the silicates yield more or less water upon ignition, and in
Jan 1, 1922
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Safety, Ventilation and Industrial Hygiene - Most Modern Methods Adopted to Attain Safe Working Conditions
By E. J. Eisenach, W. E. Jones
SAFETY and industrial hygiene have always been recognized as highly important in company policy, and the co-operative support of the company officials and entire plant personnel has contributed largel
Jan 1, 1946
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Some Defects Of The United States Mining Law
By Courtenay de Kalb
REVISION of the United States mining law is needed. chiefly because of the following reasons: 1. The conceptions as to the characteristics of orebodies that were held at the time the statute of 1872
Jan 2, 1915
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Appraisal, Development And Management Of Mineral Resources In The Philippines
By Juanito C. Fernandez
INTRODUCTION The Philippines is endowed with mineral resources, much of which still remains unexploited. The country's known reserves, at least for the major mineral commodities, have increase
Jan 1, 1982
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Institute of Metals Division - Equilibrium Electrode Potentials of Some Metal-Chlorine Galvanic Cells and Activities of Some Metal Chlorides in LiC1-KC1 Eutectic Melt
By R. G. Hudson, L. Yang
In electrochemical separation of metals, it is necessary to control the potential applied between the electrodes so that only the desired electrode reactions can occur. A knowledge of the minimum po
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - A Metallographic Study of Solute Segregation during Controlled Solidification in Tin-Lead Alloys
By H. Biloni, G. F. Bolling
The microsegregation in tin specimens containing 0.2, 0.5. or 1 wt pct Pb has been studied m detail. The specimens were grown from the melt in a controlled fashion and exhibited a well-developed cellu
Jan 1, 1963
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The Ajo Copper-Mining District
By Ira Joralemon
THE Ajo copper district is in the heart of the Arizona desert, near the western boundary of Pima county. Gila Bend, the nearest railroad point, is 43 miles north of the camp, and the little Mexican bo
Jan 8, 1914
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Natural Gas Technology - Water Drive Gas Reservoirs: Uncertainty in Reserves Evaluation From Past History
By G. Pizzi, G. M. Ciucci, G. L. Chierici
The use of the material balance equation to estimate the volume of hydrocarbons originally present in a reservoir, whose producing mechanism is partly due to water drive, has been discussed in the lit
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Plomosas Stratiform Lead and Zinc Deposits: A Discussion of Their Origin
By F. J. Escandon V.
The Plomosas stratiform lead and zinc deposits are located in northeastern Chihuahua in a sequence of folded Paleozoic and Jurassic rocks. They consist mainly of channel or blanket-like bodies of elli
Jan 1, 1976
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Transportation Hazards-Causes and Prevention
By Andrew Hyslop
IN our never ending search for new and better ways of underground mining, we find that transportation has had its share of new ideas in the past few years. The old and still effective method of track
Jan 1, 1948
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A Study of the Flotative Properties of Hematite
By W. E. Keck
THE potential iron ores of Michigan can be classified from the stand-point of the predominant impurities into siliceous, sulphurous and phos-phorous ores. Research on the flotation of each of these cl
Jan 1, 1937
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Geophysics - Experiments in Induced Polarization
By Robert G. Van Nostrand, John H. Henkel
TRANSIENT potentials obtained in resistivity prospecting can be separated into two classes. The first is electromagnetic, has a comparatively short time constant, and increases in relative amplitude a
Jan 1, 1958
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Geology - Sedimentary Rocks at Cananea, Sonora, Mexico, and Tentative Correlation with the Sections at Bisbee and the Swisshelm Mountains, Arizona
By J. Ruben Velasco, Roland B. Mulchay
CANANEA has long been recognized as a remarkable field for geologic study. The copper deposits and rocks of the district have been described by many geologists and engineers, but only the most general
Jan 1, 1955
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Wollastonite (c502e11a-c3c0-4577-8bd3-10874a0fd952)
By L. A. Roe, E. A. Elevatorski
Wollastonite, named after William H. Wollaston, an English chemist, is a calcium metasilicate, CaSiO3; CaO: 48.30%, SiO2: 51.70%. It has a short history as an industrial mineral. The earliest product
Jan 1, 1983
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Papers - Magnetic Methods - Theory and Experiments Concerning a New Compensated Magnetometer
By C. A. Heiland W. E. Pugh
The principle underlying the majority of magnetic intensity variometers is a comparison of the force to be measured with another force of known magnitude. The known force may be (a) of a magnetic natu
Jan 1, 1934