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Papers - Concentration - Organic Sulphides as Oily Collectors. (Mining Technology, May 1943)By M. D. Hassiallis
The claim is made in a number of patents1'2'3'4 that some compounds of the class known as aryl sulphides have collector properties. One of these patents generalizes the claim to include
Jan 1, 1943
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Recrystallization after Plastic Deformation-Grain Growth Phenomena in Metals-On Grain GrowthZAY JEFFRIES (communication to the Secretary*).-Having seen Mr. Ruder's micrographs of electrolytic iron, I am of the opinion that the tentative explanation offered verbally is correct. Mr. Ruder
Jan 6, 1917
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Human Response to Industrial Blasting VibrationsBy Jules E. Jenkins
In the past quarter century the seismograph has I played an increasingly important role in evaluating vibratory effects transmitted to adjacent communities by industrial blasting operations. In this p
May 1, 1956
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Natural Gas HydratesBy Don B. Carson, Donald L. Katz
NATURAL gases under pressure form crystal-line hydrates with water. Experimental data are reported on four-phase equilibrium for the methane-propane-water, methane-pentane-water, and methane-hexane-wa
Jan 1, 1941
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Natural Gas Technology - Measurement of Resistance to Flow of Fluids in Natural Gas WellsBy R. V. Smith, E. J. Dewees, R. H. Williams
Before this paper was presented, the terms "f" and "v1/f in flow equations had been called "friction coefficient" and "friction factor," respectively. However, many authors have used the names for
Jan 1, 1955
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Fortune Shows Mining Sales Up 14.5% In 1967The mining companies on the page opposite are among the elite industrial 500 in Fortune magazine's June Directory of U. S. firms that rang up the largest dollar sales volume in 1967. The companie
Jan 8, 1968
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Trends (2f82423e-c5db-405a-808d-cce591efd744)BESIDES air -water, sulphur, salt, coal, and lime-stone are the key nonmetallic raw materials used by the chemical industry and each came in for attention at the AIMF, Industrial Minerals Division mee
Jan 10, 1951
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New York Paper - A Peculiar Type of Intercrystalline Brittleness of Copper (with Discussion)By S. C. Langdon, Henry S. Rawdon
The following note describing the behavior of copper under rather unusual conditions is offered for its suggestiveness rather than as a complete study of the question. The examinations described were
Jan 1, 1921
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Pacific Rim Coal Resources A Comparative AnalysisBy Peter J. Szabo
Introduction This is the Pacific Rim. Nearly three fourths of the world's population live on or near its border. In the recent past, on any given day, one could find traversing its„ borders pi
Jan 1, 1982
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Halifax Paper - Improvements in Ore-Crushing MachineryBy S. R. Krom
In connection with perfecting a system of pneumatic concentration I had in view the improvement of machines for crushing and pulverizing ores. A study of the whole subject convinced me that the princi
Jan 1, 1886
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MiscelIaneous - Flow of Gas through Coal (With Discussion)By V. F. Parry, S. P. Burke
The presence of gas in coal mines necessitates the use of costly ventilation arrangements and the use of expensive mining methods. On the other hand, the gas itself in many instances is of considerabl
Jan 1, 1936
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MiscelIaneous - Flow of Gas through Coal (With Discussion)By V. F. Parry, S. P. Burke
The presence of gas in coal mines necessitates the use of costly ventilation arrangements and the use of expensive mining methods. On the other hand, the gas itself in many instances is of considerabl
Jan 1, 1936
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Copper Ore MiningBy John K. Hammes, Stanley D. Michaelson
The material presented in this chapter is supplemental information on those significant aspects of open-pit copper mining that are to an extent unique and therefore not detailed in previous sections c
Jan 1, 1968
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Washington Paper - Blast-Furnace StatisticsBy John A. Church
In the year 1874, when the price of pig-iron was still high, that staple product became the subject of discussion in the newspapers and among those philosophers who are determined to know the "reason
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Blast-Furnace StatisticsBy John A. Church
IN the year 1874, when the price of pig-iron was still high, that staple product became the subject of discussion in the newspapers and among those philosophers who are determined to know the "reason
Jan 1, 1876
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Slope Stability InstrumentationBy Burt Hartmann
The nation's ever-expanding construction and mining activity has placed an increasing demand upon engineers and geologists to design and construct stable slopes in earth materials-soil and rock.
Jan 1, 1968
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Enterprises Of Great MomentBy Robert Glass Cleland
THOUGH the rapid revival of the copper market in the early twenties solved the most serious of the company's immediate postwar difficulties, a much more fundamental, long-range problem still rema
Jan 1, 1952
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Washington Paper - Biographical Notice of Charles A. AshburnerBy J. P. Lesley
The old do not love to see the young pass away from the light of the sun before them. Fathers would fain keep their sons by their side to the. end of life ; but the old Greeks, who loved the old gods,
Jan 1, 1890
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Pennsylvania: Counties - Armstrong CountyCoal was known in this county before 1819, but there is no record of its use before that year. In that year a furnace, the first one built in the northwestern countries, was put in blast on Bear Creek
Jan 1, 1942
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Helicopters for Exploration?By M. A. Matzkin
The Problem: There are no roads and mapping has been inadequate. There isn't a clearing large enough to accommodate a conventional airplane. Entry would consume months, yet the area must be inves
Jan 9, 1953