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Certain Aspects of Magnetic SurveyingBy L. B. Slichter
IT has been estimated that rock exposures in most mining districts aggregate less than 1 per cent. of the total surface area.1 Conclusions concerning the hidden 99 per cent. necessarily have been base
Jan 1, 1928
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Tramming Ore---Shaft to Surface Railroad Bins"The method of conveying ore from the ore-pocket at the shaft collar to the railroad ore bins, whence it is transported to the reduction works, is by cars with electric haulage.The cut shows the car c
Jan 1, 1913
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Analysis Of Solutions To Potential EquationsBy J. R. Sturgul
Two problems which are common to nearly every branch of applied physics, including geophysics, are the ‘Dirichlet Problem’ and the ‘Poisson Problem.’ A numerical method for their solution is derived a
Jan 1, 1969
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IndonesiaBy John V. Beall
Probably the only hotel in the world with near 100% occupancy at all times is the modern Hotel Indonesia in Djakarta. However, there is little gaiety among the scores of business men who occupy the ho
Jan 1, 1970
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Chicago Paper - Sulfur in Coal, Geological AspectsBy Geo. H. Ashley
The following paper is intended to be suggestive only, and to open the way for discussion and further observation. Its preparation was requested only two days before the time limit set for the submiss
Jan 1, 1920
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Melting Point of Refractory Materials - DiscussionJ. S. UNGER, ? Pittsburgh, Pa. (written discussion ?).-Firebricks intended for, the same purpose, but supplied by different manufacturers, may be of entirely different clays, contain different proport
Jan 12, 1919
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Modeling For Scale-Up Of Tumbling Ball MillsBy L. G. Austin
The procedure for scaling breakage parameters determined in a laboratory mill to values for a full-scale mill is briefly presented. A simulation model of a closed circuit mill also requires a model of
Jan 1, 1984
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Papers - Observing Formation of Martensite in Certain Alloy Steels at Low Temperatures (With Discussion)By O. A. Knight, Helmut Muller-Stock
The suppression of the austenite-martensite transformation that can be brought about by the addition of certain alloying elements, such as manganese or nickel, to plain carbon steel has been known for
Jan 1, 1934
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Third Session - Metallurgy Of Secondary MetalsBy Walter Bonsack
THE CHAIRMAN.-This is the third and last session of the Institute of Metals Division's Symposium on Secondary Metals, and certainly the best of those that I have attended in the last few years. I
Jan 1, 1943
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A Feasible Plan for Gaging Individual WellsBy Roswell Johnson
To know the rate of decline of oil wells is very important, yet ordinarily we are prevented from getting this rate because the oil from several wells is put into one or a few tanks as soon as the well
Jan 6, 1917
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Iodine (1470c5ea-ea3e-43c1-97e3-0a57d2efc34c)By L. A. Roe, John Jan
Iodine is a soft, lustrous, grayish-black nonmetallic element with a density of 4.9. It is the least active of the four members of the halogen family. The other members are, in order of increasing act
Jan 1, 1983
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Middle Management Training For Mining EngineersBy John Fayerweather
Here is a challenge to industry to meet the need for management training for the men now passing from essentially technical work into managerial responsibility . . . And a program to handle the job.
Oct 1, 1956
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Automatic Truck Dispatching Using A Microcomputer (f3b69e5b-6392-491e-b67b-f952a58b9867)By A. Rakshit, W. E. Kolb, Y. C. Kim
An IBM/XT microcomputer with 10 MB hard disk storage, together with automatic sensing capability of truck movements at several key locations in the pit, formed the core of this automatic truck dispatc
Jan 1, 1986
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Mine Drainage at Eureka Gorp. Ltd., Eureka, Nev.By George W. Mitchell
THE property of Eureka Corp. Ltd. is located in the approximate geographic center of Nevada, 2 miles from Eureka, the county seat. The great sources of power, the Colorado, Snake, and Salmon Rivers an
Jan 8, 1953
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Commercial Chelating Extractants as Collectors: Flotation of Copper Minerals Using "LIX" ReagentsBy P. Somasundaran, D. R. Nagaraj
This study initiated to explore the potential of commercial chelating extractant for beneficiation of minerals revealed "LIX "65N to be an excellent collector for cuprite and chrysocolla. The collecto
Jan 1, 1980
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New York Paper - Critical Ranges of Some Commercial Nickel SteelsBy Howard Scott
The great advances made in mechanical engineering during recent years through the use of alloy steels, as illustrated by the development of the airplane and automobile, may be ascribed primarily to th
Jan 1, 1922
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New York Paper - Critical Ranges of Some Commercial Nickel SteelsBy Howard Scott
The great advances made in mechanical engineering during recent years through the use of alloy steels, as illustrated by the development of the airplane and automobile, may be ascribed primarily to th
Jan 1, 1922
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Ecological Considerations In Cyanidation Plant PracticesBy R. S. Shoemaker, F. W. McQuiston
ECOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN CYANIDATION PLANT PRACTICES Ecological controls of tailing storage pond effluents are mainly concerned with mercury and residual cyanide and are critical problems for
Jan 1, 1975
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Copper Sulfate as Flotation Activator for SphaleriteBy O. C. Ralston
THE use of copper sulfate for improving the flotation behavior of sphalerite is probably at least 15 years old. The original discovery of its activating influence is somewhat obscure. The story goes t
Jan 1, 1929
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Course For ProspectorsThe State School of Mines, University of Utah, is this year giving-a four weeks' course for prospectors-Jan. 8 to Feb. 3, 1917-covering the fundamentals of geology, mineralogy, mining and the met
Jan 2, 1917