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Personal (dfdb9db5-54d8-4fe2-8e1b-65b0b7b4c790)(Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or their fellow-members.) Members and guests who registered at Institute headquarters during the period May
Jan 7, 1914
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Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Utah in 1937By C. E. Shoenfelt
Wildcat drilling operations in Utah in 1937 added nothing of importance to the commercial oil and gas possibilities of the state, and such operations consisted largely of efforts to reach objectives i
Jan 1, 1938
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Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Virginia Meeting (88363a08-f302-4bb1-ad7f-d6803a5d4ea3)By R. W. Raymond
to same extent, the assumptions tinderlying Dr. Ilu?ley's con alusions. These amrrmptions are: that 'the loss of metal per million tons of trafffc, depends, first upon the circrtnistances
Jan 1, 1881
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An Engineering Study Of The Magnolia Field In ArkansasBy H. F. Winham
THE history, development, subsurface geology, production, economics and estimated reserves are discussed in this paper. The Magnolia structure is an anticline with a known maximum structural relief at
Jan 1, 1942
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Production Engineering - An Engineering Study of the Magnolia Field in Arkansas (Petr. Tech. Sept. 1942)By H. F. Winham
The history, development, subsurface geology, production, economics and estimated reserves are discussed in this paper. The Magnolia structure is an anticline with a known maximum structural relief at
Jan 1, 1943
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Production Engineering - An Engineering Study of the Magnolia Field in Arkansas (Petr. Tech. Sept. 1942)By H. F. Winham
The history, development, subsurface geology, production, economics and estimated reserves are discussed in this paper. The Magnolia structure is an anticline with a known maximum structural relief at
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - - Produciton - Domestic- Oil and Gas Development in MississippiBy B. C. Craft
Development and exploratory work in Mississippi during 1934 was rather active, resulting in the expansion of the proven area and the drilling of a number of important wildcat wells. Mississippi sho
Jan 1, 1935
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Membership (5bfbf3db-e869-48cc-b266-810b0820ea17)NEW MEMBERS The following list comprises the names of those persons who became members during the period of Oct. 10, 1917, to Nov. 10, 1917. ABEY, HIROSHI Min. & Met. Engr.. Mitsubishi Co., Tokio,
Jan 12, 1917
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Climax Dedicates Acid Leach-Charcoal Adsorption Process For Moly Oxide OresA new $18-million hydrometallurgical ore treatment facility for the recovery of molybdenum oxide was dedicated at Climax, Colo., on November 19 by Climax Molybdenum Co., division of AMAX. The Company
Jan 12, 1966
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Died In ServiceBy Bailey, Lewis Newton
Bailey, Lewis Newton, Master Engineer, Senior Oracle, 4th Regiment, U. S. Engineers, Headquarters Company, died of pneumonia, at Camp Merritt, N. J., on April 30, 1918. Baird, Louis, Lieut., Royal Fi
Jan 11, 1918
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Structural and Stratigraphic Control of Ore Deposition in the West Shasta Copper-Zinc District, CaliforniaBy A. R. Kinkel
The Shasta copper-zinc district of northern California lies in the foothills of the Klamath Mountains at the northern end of the Sacramento Valley. It contains two main areas of base-metal ore deposit
Jan 2, 1955
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Board Of DirectorsMeeting of June 4, 1915.-The President announced the appointment of the following Committee on National Reserve Corps of Engineers: Dr. Henry S. Drinker, Chairman; Arthur S. Dwight, and Warren A. Wilb
Jan 7, 1915
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Large Truck Trains – A Rapid Transit System For Phosphate OreBy George L. Atwood, William Brown
Phosphate ore is being mined at Monsanto Co.'s Henry mine, near Soda Springs, Idaho, for the company's three furnace elemental phosphorus plant near Soda Springs. The finished product from t
Jan 8, 1972
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The U. S. Minerals Attache ProgramBy K. P. Wang, Virgil L. Barr
The U.S. Minerals Attaché Program, similar to the scientific and technical attache programs of other industrialized nations, is designed specifically to keep surveillance on significant worldwide deve
Jan 11, 1965
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8. SubsidiariesBy Robert Glass Cleland
[PHELPS DODGE COPPER PRODUCTS CORPORATION OFFICE, 40 WALL STREET, NEW YORK 5, N. Y. OFFICERS Whipple Jacobs President Howard T. Brinton Vice-President Edgar P. Dunlaevy Vice-President Weightman Edw
Jan 1, 1952
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Proceedings Of Meeting And World Conference On Mineral Resources – Seventy-Fifth Anniversary Celebration And World Conference On Mineral ResourcesAT the meeting of the Board of Directors in March 1945, plans were discussed for a special General Meeting to commemorate, in an appropriate way, the founding of the Institute at Wilkes-Barre, Pennsyl
Jan 1, 1947
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Howard I. Smith, Chairman, Industrial Minerals Division, A.I.M.E.By AIME AIME
WHEN H. I. Smith joined the Institute back in 1908, he was an instructor in mining and metallurgy at Penn State the college from which he had graduated the year before with a B.S. degree. He had not g
Jan 1, 1943
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Uranium Deposits in the Black HillsBy John W. King
Uranium ore was first discovered in the Edgemont district of the southern Black Hills in the summer of 1951. The discovery was not made known for some time, but after the news leaked out prospecting b
Jan 1, 1956
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Geology, Geological Engineering - Geology Applied to the Study of Coal Mine Bumps At Sunnyside, UtahBy F. W. Osterwald, C. R. Dunrud
Coal mine bumps are a serious hazard to life and property in the mines of east-central Utah. Research into geologic factors associated with these bumps indicates that the bumps are spatially and genet
Jan 1, 1965
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Effect of Blending on the Chemical and Size Variations of Raw MaterialsBy H. Evans, L. A. Hunt
The raw materials used in the blast furnaces at the Geneva Works of U.S. Steel Corp. have a high degree of variability in size-consist and chemical content. To overcome the problems caused by the use
Jan 1, 1968