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Ore FindingBy Augustus Locke
WHY should I, a geologist, be coming before you to talk about finding ore? Certainly, the great discoveries of the past have not been made by geologists, but by men of very different tastes and traini
Jan 1, 1926
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Copper and Copper-rich Alloys - Kinetics - Grain Growth in 70-30 Brass (Metals Tech., Feb. 1948, TP 2326) With discussionBy Paul A. Beck, John Towers, W. D. Manly
Recent work on grain growth in high purity aluminum and in a solid solution type alloy of aluminum and magnesium1 showed that the isothermal increase of the average grain diameter D with time follows
Jan 1, 1949
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Copper and Copper-rich Alloys - Kinetics - Grain Growth in 70-30 Brass (Metals Tech., Feb. 1948, TP 2326) With discussionBy John Towers, Paul A. Beck, W. D. Manly
Recent work on grain growth in high purity aluminum and in a solid solution type alloy of aluminum and magnesium1 showed that the isothermal increase of the average grain diameter D with time follows
Jan 1, 1949
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The Origin of Vein-Filled Openings in Southeastern AlaskaBy Arthur C. Spencer
IN extension of a suggestion already made to account for certain features observed in the Juneau gold-belt in southeastern Alaska,' it is the object of the present paper to indicate in detail cer
Nov 1, 1905
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East Texas to Become a Pig Iron ProducerBy George H. Anderson
A CHAPTER of appealing interest was added to the industrial history of the Southwest early in June, when the War Production Board gave final approval to the erection of a blast furnace, a battery of c
Jan 1, 1942
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The Mantos Blancos Operation - Chile's New Integrated Copper ProducerBy Werner Joseph, Richard R. Knobler
When the first batch of refined copper ingots was cast at Mantos Blancos in January 1961, eight years of exploration, development and metallurgical pioneering by Mauricio Hochschild & Co. had come to
Jan 1, 1962
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Need of Unit Operation in Kettleman HillsBy AIME AIME
IT is unlikely that any oil field has ever threatened the future course of the oil industry as does Kettleman today. It seems that nature has striven to outdo herself in combining in this field every
Jan 1, 1930
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Institute of Metals Division - Constitutional Investigations in the Boron-Platinum SystemBy F. Wald, A. J. Rosenberg
The general features of the constitution of the B-Pt system were determined using standard rnetal-lograph~c, thermoanalytic, and X-ray diffraction techniques. Three compound were found. Two of these,
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Division - The Surface Tension of Iron and Some Iron AlloysBy Brian F. Dyson
The surface tensions at 1550°C of some Fe-S alloys (in the range 0.008 to 0.052 wt pct S), Fe-Sn alloys (0.31 to 48.4 wt pct Sn), Fe-P alloys (0.038 to 2.38 wt pct P), Fe-Cu alloys (2.15 to 22.8 wt pc
Jan 1, 1963
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Petroleum Developments In Central America In 1923By Arthur Redfield
THE year 1923 was marked by slight progress in exploring and developing the petroleum resources assumed to exist in Central America. Actual drilling for oil took place only in Costa Rica and Panama. T
Jan 3, 1924
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Papers - Petroleum Economics - World Consumption of Petroleum Products and Related Fuels for Military PurposesBy J. W. Ristori, V. R. Garfias, R. V. Whetshel
During the past eight years, in trying to estimate world consumption of petroleum and related products, the authors have been unable to account for all the supplies available in any one year. There ha
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - Smelting - Waste-Heat Boiler Practice - Copper-refinery Waste-heat Boilers at Great Falls Reduction Department,By E. S. Bardwell
Each of the three refining furnaces in use at Great Falls is provided with a waste-heat boiler. The general arrangement of furnace and boiler is as shown in Fig. 1. Two of the furnaces have hearths 45
Jan 1, 1934
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New York Paper - Of Mr. Emmons’s Paper on A Concise Method of Showing Ore-Reserves (see p. 322)E. W. King, Bozeman, Mont.: The form of measuring up ore in sight looks very plausible, as illustrated in the paper of Mr. Emmons, but from my experience of many years of mining in Montana and Nevada,
Jan 1, 1913
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Unemployment-A By-Product of ProsperityBy Arthur Young
UNEMPLOYMENT no longer finds its cure in pros-perity. Not only is there surplus labor in over-developed industries -like coal -mining, but more and more man, power is being released by technical im-pr
Jan 1, 1928
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A.I.M.E. Publications - Contents of 1930 VolumesUntil a comparatively few years ago, interest in tantalum was limited almost wholly to its scientific investigation, but its extreme resistance to the action of even the strong mineral acids, its grea
Jan 1, 1930
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The Briquetting of Anthracite CoalBURKE BAKER, Philadelphia, Pa. (written discussion*).-The small briquetting plant of the American Briquet Co., at 25th Street and Washington Ave., Philadelphia, was built primarily as a demonstration
Jan 3, 1918
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California Paper - The Peculiar Ore-Deposit of the East Murchison United Gold-Mine, Western AustraliaBy D. P. Mitchell
Western Australia is the home of much that is new and interesting in the gold-mining industry. Some of the gold deposits are outranked for size and value by nothing yet discorered, while the value of
Jan 1, 1900
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Institute of Metals Division - Some Observations of Grain Boundary Relaxation in Copper and Copper-2Pct CobaltBy D. T. Peters, J. C. Bisseliches, J. W. Spretnak
The pain boundary relaxation phenomenon in high-purity copper, 0FHC copper, and a precipitation-hardenable alloy o-fCu-2 uit pct Co has been studied by internal ,friction and elastic aftereffect techn
Jan 1, 1964
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Application Of Pyrometry To The Ceramic IndustriesBy C. B. Thwing
IT is likely that among most races, owing to the ease of finding and working clay, the making of clay utensils was learned earlier than the molding of metal implements. The ancients made good pottery
Jan 9, 1919
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Caving Methods at MiamiBy Arthur Notman
THE matters I had intended to present to you ap-peared in the March 12 issue of Engineering and Mining Journal over the signature of George J. Young, so that although I should like to talk to you for
Jan 4, 1927