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Dust: Its Hazard, Control, and Collection with Especial Reference to Surface PlantsBy Geo. T. Lynch
PALEOLITHIC MAN, laboriously shaping a stone implement in his cave, discovered that the dust irritated his eyes and nostrils and hindered his labors, whereupon, muttering a few incantations, forerunne
Jan 1, 1938
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Shocks on Railway BridgesBy John W. Cloud
THE delivery of blows upon roadway structures by the locomotive engine at high speed, although long recognized, has, perhaps, not been a generally understood in severity, relation to speed, and cause
Jan 1, 1881
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Virginia Paper - Notes on the Gold-Mill ConstructionBy A. J. Bowie
The discovery of the auriferous cement gravel deposits in and near Deadwood Gulch, Lawrence County, Dakota Territory, in 1876, created a mining excitement, and rush to the Black Hills. Numerous ten an
Jan 1, 1882
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Institute of Metals Division - Copper-Silica and Copper-Alumina Alloys Of High Temperature InterestBy Nicholas J. Grant, Klaus M. Zwilsky
EVER since the unusual high temperature creep resistance and structure stability of SAP (Sintered Aluminum Powder) and similar aluminum-alumina alloys were reported,'," there has been a need to d
Jan 1, 1958
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The Commercial Production Of Sound, Homogeneous Steel Ingots And BloomsBy Emil Gathmann
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) THROUGH wide experience at numerous mills in the United States I have found that there is a decided difference of opinion among the producers of steel as to w
Jan 8, 1915
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Philadelphia Paper - Shocks on Railway BridgesBy John W. Cloud
The delivery of blows upon roadway structures by the locomotive engine at high speed, althongh long recognized, has, perhaps, not been as generally understood in severity, relation to speed, and cause
Jan 1, 1881
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Development Of Monsanto’s Western Phosphate OperationBy G. Donald Emigh
WESTERN phosphate resources which lie in Ida- ho, Montana, Utah, and Wyoming, have seen great expansion of activity in recent years. Growth has been two-pronged: expansion in fertilizer use, and since
Jan 11, 1954
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Hyphens and Compound Words (a312cb5d-d8fd-4b64-9366-c6936a963bf4)By T. A. Rickard
A severely technical article, however well written, can not be an agreeable form of literature. It suffers from the defects of its qualities. One defect is a congestion of language, due to a multiplic
Jan 1, 1931
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Chattanooga Paper - The Jenks Corundum Mine, Macon County, N. C.By Rossiter W. Raymond
By the courtesy of Mr. Charles W. Jenks, of Boston, one of the owners of this interesting mine, I am enabled to lay before the Institute a suite of specimehs, illustrating its peculiar formation and t
Jan 1, 1879
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Recrystallization after Plastic DeformationBy Henry Howe
THIS paper is a discussion of the extremely valuable one of Mathewson and Phillips, The Recrystallization of Cold-Worked Alpha Brass on Annealing,1 which not only gives us a wealth of important data r
Jan 10, 1916
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San Francisco Paper - The Pacific Coast Iron Situation. The Iron Ores of California and Possibilities of Smelting (with Discussion)By Charles Colcock Jones
In any discussion of this very large subject we are confronted at the outset with so many obstacles that at best only a fragmentary and rather disconnected presentation can be made of it, and my hope
Jan 1, 1916
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Halifax Paper - The Amalgamation of Gold-Ores, arid the Loss of Gold in Chloridizing-Roasting, with Especial Reference to Roasting in a Stetefeldt FurnaceBy C. A. Stetefeldt
In May and June, 1885, I was engaged in examining the goldores of Las Minas, in the State of Vera Cruz, Mexico, with a view of finding a cheap and efficient method for extracting the gold. The foll
Jan 1, 1886
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Leaching Of Copper Silicate Ore With Aqueous Ammonium CarbonateBy R. F. Frantz, T. P. McNulty
The upper-level mineralization of the din Buttes, Arizona copper orebody consists primarily of dilute copper silicate impregnation in fault clay and throughout the altered limestone hostrock. Cuprite
Jan 1, 1973
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New York Paper - The Briquetting of Iron-OresBy N. V. Hansell
The last few years have shown an increasing interest in the subject of beneficiating iron-ores in all iron-producing countries. In the United States, this movement has been slower than in certain part
Jan 1, 1913
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Some Factors Affecting The Usefulness Of Base-Metal ThermocouplesBy O. L. Kowalke
During the last few years the use of base-metal thermocouples has increased very considerably in various industries, due to the necessity for more precise control of temperatures. The base-metal coupl
Jan 9, 1919
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Non-ferrous Metallurgy - Production of Ferric Sulfate and Sulfuric Acid from Roaster Gas (with Discussion)By G. L. Oldright, F. S. Wartman, H. E. Keyes
The economic manufacture of sulfuric acid by the ordinary chamber process usually involves production on a large scale and a plant that is costly to construct. The nature of sulfuric acid makes it cos
Jan 1, 1926
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In Situ Determination Of Strength Properties In A Quartz Diorite Rock MassBy William F. Brace, Howard R. Pratt, Wayne S. Brown
In many engineering structures, the mechanical properties of large volumes of rock must be considered. Typically, such properties are assumed to be the same as those of small laboratory samples, altho
Jan 1, 1971
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Papers - Tensile Properties of Rolled Magnesium Alloys, I-Binary Alloys with Aluminum, Antimony, Bismuth, Cadmium, Copper Lead, Nickel, Silver Thallium, Tin and ZincBy John C. McDonald
The amount of published literature in the field of mechanical properties of magnesium alloys is not great; particularly with respect to rolled alloys. Haughton and Prytherchl have summarized most of t
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Tensile Properties of Rolled Magnesium Alloys, I-Binary Alloys with Aluminum, Antimony, Bismuth, Cadmium, Copper Lead, Nickel, Silver Thallium, Tin and ZincBy John C. McDonald
The amount of published literature in the field of mechanical properties of magnesium alloys is not great; particularly with respect to rolled alloys. Haughton and Prytherchl have summarized most of t
Jan 1, 1940
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AluminumBy Francis C. Frary
OF the five metals that now show the highest figures for annual tonnage production in the world, three (iron, copper, and lead) have been known and used by man for many thousands of years. The fourth
Jan 1, 1953