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Drilling- Equipment, Methods and Materials - The Hydroxyl Factor in Shale ControlBy W. C. Browning
The influence of the hydroxyl factor is more damaging to formations penetrated and causes greater consumption of drilling mud additives than previously realized. This hydroxyl effect on clays is essen
Jan 1, 1965
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A Labor-Chart For The Management Of Mining And Milling Operations.By JOSEPH MACDONALD
STRIPPED of its romantic possibilities, mining is a commercial business, carried on for the profit there is in it, and the business of the manager, in its ultimate analysis, is to make the profit as l
Jan 1, 1909
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Manganese Steel and the Allotropic Theory (baf0a287-252f-4684-a09e-d69b069dba83)By Albert Sauveur
AT the New York meeting of the Institute, February, 1914, Professor Hopkinson and Sir Robert Hadfield presented an important paper entitled Research with Regard to the Non-Magnetic and Magnetic Condit
Jan 9, 1914
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Production - Domestic - Texas - Development and Production in the East Texas DistrictBy Wallace Ralston
The East Texas district includes the northeast 38 counties of the State of Texas. It still remains one of the most important oil-and-gas-producing areas of the United States, since it includes within
Jan 1, 1937
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Washington Paper - Filling and Blowing-In at the Durham Blast-FurnaceBy B. F. Fackenthal
One of the practical questions presented to the blast-furnace manager, with regard to which little help can be obtained from existing technical literature, is the manner of filling and blowing-in. Thi
Jan 1, 1890
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Albany Paper - The Determination of Power for Rolling Iron and SteelBy Louis Katona
The practical execution of the design for rolling-mills presented by the writer at the Paris meeting* of thc Iron and Steel Institute in 1900 involves the determination of some questions not yet discu
Jan 1, 1904
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Factors In The Ignition Of Methane And Coal Dust By ExplosivesBy G. St. J. Perrott
ONE of the important hazards in coal mining is the danger of ignition of explosive mixtures of methane and air or coal dust and air, or both, by the explosives used in blasting the coal. It has long b
Jan 10, 1926
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Future Value Of Mineral Property - The Average Through Booms And PanicsBy J. R. Finlay
Every business man who has reached the age of forty, or perhaps even thirty, must know from his own experience that there are occasional periods of "good times'' and others of "bad times "-b
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - General - The Pittsburgh Coal Bed-Its Early History and DevelopmentBy Howard N. Eavenson
From the Pittsburgh coal bed in the four states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Maryland and West Virginia has been produced an output that, at mine prices, represents a greater value than any other single min
Jan 1, 1938
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Papers - General - The Pittsburgh Coal Bed-Its Early History and DevelopmentBy Howard N. Eavenson
From the Pittsburgh coal bed in the four states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Maryland and West Virginia has been produced an output that, at mine prices, represents a greater value than any other single min
Jan 1, 1938
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Technical Notes - On the Casting, Rolling, and Annealing Textures of ChromiumBy W. H. Smith
IN the course of an investigation on chromium containing minor amounts of alloying elements, the information herein has been obtained on the crys-tallographic orientations resulting from arc melting,
Jan 1, 1956
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Schuylkill Valley (Reading) Paper - The Zeehan and Dundas Smelting-Works, TasmaniaBy George F. Beardsley
The silver-fields of Zeehan and Dundas are located on the "West Coast" of Tasmania, 30 miles from the port of Strahan on the Macquarie Harbor. This harbor is 17 miles long, from 4 to 5 miles wide, and
Jan 1, 1893
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The Ale Of Certain Metallic Minerals In Precipitating Silver And Gold.*By Chase Palmer
INTRODUCTION. WHILE the reducing action of organic matter, of ferrous sulphate, and of hydrogen sulphide has frequently been invoked to account for the deposition of native gold and silver from ore-f
Jan 5, 1913
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Recent Developments And Applications Of The Microseismic Method In Deep MinesBy Fred Leighton, Wilson Blake
The microseismic method of detecting instability and high-stress zones in underground mines was developed by the U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) in the early 1940's.l,2 For about 25 years this method
Jan 1, 1970
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Metal And Non - Metal Mining Research In The Bureau Of MinesBy Thomas E. Howard
Scientific research in mining has a comparatively short history. So long as it was possible to maintain adequate mineral supplies by long-established methods, there was little need for the scientific
Jan 1, 1962
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Fractures And Physical Properties Of The Mount Waldo Granite Pluton, MaineBy F. T. Lee
Directional dependence of strength and deformation properties of the Mount Waldo granite pluton in southeastern Maine is controlled by joints and microfractures whose orientations are linked to flow-
Jan 1, 1984
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Mass Transfer And Reaction Rates In The Solvent Extraction Of MetalsBy E. S. Vargas, T. W. Chapman, Samuel W-S Tse
Models for interphase mass transfer rates in the solvent extraction of metals are developed for zinc and copper chlorides being extracted by trilsooctylamine and for copper extraction by LIX 64N from
Jan 1, 1981
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Recataloging the World's Largest Technical LibraryBy HARRISON W. CRAVER
THE principal purposes of library-catalogs are to enable a reader to find a book of which the author, the title, or the subject is known; to show what the library has. by a given author, or on a given
Jan 1, 1920
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The Manufacture Of Weldless Steel Tires For Locomotive And Car WheelsBy Guilliaem Aertsen
THE derivation of the word tire (or tyre, as it is spelled in England) is obscure. Some dictionaries suggest that it is the aphetic form for "attire, covering," so called as being the outside covering
Jan 1, 1917
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Mineral And Metal Variations In The Veins Of Fresnillo, Zacatecas, MexicoBy J. C. McCarthy, J. B. Stone
AT Fresnillo a series of veins that has yielded very large quantities of silver and other metals has been developed over a length of 6500 ft. and to a depth of over 3000 ft. In the course of this work
Jan 1, 1942