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Fluoride in the Ground Water of AlabamaBy Philip E. LaMoreaux
Fluoride, generally less than 0.5 ppm, is present in ground water from rocks of Paleozoic age and older, in northern and eastern Alabama. Some of the water-bearing formations in the Coastal Plain area
Jan 1, 1950
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German Bucket Wheel Excavators and Belt ConveyorsBy W. H. Wamsley
Used in combination with conveyor belt haulage, bucket wheel excavators offer unusual possibilities for low excavation and haulage costs. Originating in Germany, these machines are now in use or on or
Dec 1, 1956
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St. Louis Paper - The New Jersey Zinc Co.’s Franklin LaboratoryBy D. Jenkins
The Franklin Laboratory was designed mainly for the analysis of the products from the two concentrating mills situated at Franklin and Sterling Hill, the most important determinations being the zinc,
Jan 1, 1918
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New York Paper - A New System for Operating Regenerative Hot-Blast StovesBy Jacob T. Wainwright
AS a means for increasing the efficiency in modern blast-furnaces by supplying to them blast of a much higher temperature than is now possible, the writer offers as a suggestion a modification in the
Jan 1, 1889
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Valuation of Coal Land, (2be6c6a4-11a3-4f19-99a1-9782ee9286d3)Discussion * of the paper of H. M. Chance, presented at the butte meeting, august, 1913, and printed in bulletin No. 79, July, 1913, pp. 1315 to 1341. George H. Ashley,+ Washington, d. C.:-Mr. Chance
Jan 11, 1913
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Position of Silver after the Pittman ActBy Cornelius Kelley
THE American producers of silver are keenly alive to the importance of the silver problem and its vital effect on the mining industry in Montana and other States where precious-metal mining constitute
Jan 2, 1923
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Utilization Of By-Products Of Stone Industry In GeorgiaBy Nelson Severinghaus
FOLLOWING the end of hostilities of World War II, a resurgence of industrial and home building has given impetus to the use of many products of the stone industry. Shortage and high prices of some bui
Jan 1, 1947
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Eastern Magnetite - Output Again Drops, With Only Six Miner OperatingBy H. M. Roche
MAGNETITE mining and milling in the Eastern States was sharply curtailed in 1938, production showing a decrease of 36 per cent from 1936 and 57 per cent from 1937. Six mines, one in Pennsylvania, two
Jan 1, 1939
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New York Paper - Primary Downward Changes in Ore Deposits (with Discussion)By W. H. Emmons
Most mineral deposits change as they are followed downward on their dips. Some of these changes are due to primary arrangement; different ores were precipitated at different depths when the deposits w
Jan 1, 1924
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Minerals Beneficiation - Selection of Conveyors for Handling Hot Bulk MaterialsBy J. Walter Snavely
PRESENT-DAY processing in many industries, calcining, sintering, briquetting, beneficiation and nodulizing, increasingly calls for the handling of large volumes of hot bulk materials. Various types of
Jan 1, 1954
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Method Of Mining. A Steeply Pitching Anthracite Vein By Successive SkipsBy J. S. Miller
THIS paper describes the method of mining a steeply pitching anthracite seam on a heavy pitch in the Orchard vein in No. 1 Tunnel of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Co. The Orchard vein in the Nesqueh
Jan 3, 1925
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Economic Equilibrium in Petroleum Refining OperationsBy Norman Gerald
THE lack of a continuous operating balance in petroleum refining, which is analyzed in this paper, is by no means a feature solely of this division of the oil industry. Serious disequilibria of a capi
Jan 1, 1939
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Petroleum Economics - Economic Equilibrium in Petroleum Refining Operations. (T. P. 1030, with discussion)By Norman D. Fitz Gerald
The lack of a continuous operating balance in petroleum refining, which is analyzed in this paper, is by no means a feature solely of this division of the oil industry. Serious disequilibria of a capi
Jan 1, 1939
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Petroleum Economics - Economic Equilibrium in Petroleum Refining Operations. (T. P. 1030, with discussion)By Norman D. Fitz Gerald
The lack of a continuous operating balance in petroleum refining, which is analyzed in this paper, is by no means a feature solely of this division of the oil industry. Serious disequilibria of a capi
Jan 1, 1939
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Bituminous Mining MethodsBy John L. Schroder
The demands for increased productivity on the 1967 coal industry have generated new operating trends and fresh approaches to old methods, which have enabled the industry to keep pace with the expandin
Jan 2, 1968
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Minerals Beneficiation - Maintaining An Optimum Grinding ChargeBy A. A. Rauth
In this paper, the author derives a series of formulas from basic principles and illustrates the application of these formulas to practical grinding charge problems. The paper establishes the nearly p
Jan 1, 1970
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Papers - - Stabilization - Some Constitutional Aspects of the Oil ProblemBy Henry M. Bates, Roscoe Pound
Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen: I accepted your Chairman's invitation to speak to a group of experts in this field with the greatest hesitation, because I know little or nothing about it. Certainly I
Jan 1, 1935
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Prospecting for Useful Clays in Relation with Their Conditions of GenesisBy Georges Millot
USUALLY the search for clays is left to chance in unexplored areas. A local working by the inhabitants or an outcrop is often the only guide. If the conditions of genesis of clays were always known, a
Jan 1, 1952
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Minerals and Monopoly – Formula For Soviet StrengthBy Alexander Gakner
Since the end of World War II the Soviet Union has made great strides toward economic development of the country. Today it is firmly established as the world's second largest industrial power aft
Jan 6, 1960
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Tungsten and ThoriaBy Zay, Jeffries
THE effect of thoria (ThO2) on grain growth in tungsten was discussed in some detail in a paper presented before this Institute by one, of the authors in 1918.1 In that paper it " was assumed that the
Jan 1, 1927