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Arizona Paper - Comparative Friction Test of Two Types of Coal Mine Cars (with Discussion)By P. B. Liebermann
The resistance to motion offered by mine cars is caused principally by: Rolling friction, flange friction, bending rails, bearing friction and wind resistance. With proper construction and with a fair
Jan 1, 1917
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Concerning Sulphur And Its Ore.SULPHUR is a very well known mineral and apparently is produced in many places. It is engendered from an unctuous earthy and powerfully hot substance so that it is considered among experienced workers
Jan 1, 1942
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Crushing-Machines For Cyanide Plants.By MARK H. LAMB
(Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910.) THE recent growth of a sentiment among cyanide-plant designers against the use of gravity-stamps for the crushing preliminary to cyanidation may be said to date
Jul 1, 1910
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Colonial IronmakersBy M. O. Holowaty, C. M. Squarcy
Blast furnaces are the tools of men, and it is men who have made them great. Here is presented the story of the Ironmakers-the men who first poured hot metal into what would someday be the sinews of a
Jan 1, 1961
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Society of Petroleum Engineers of AIME (c1d5d59b-aa39-4e59-b612-3597f33d87b5)Established as a Society February 26, 1957 John S Bell, President Wayne E Glenn, President-elect Basil P Kantzer, Past President R E Howard, Vice, President M B Penn, Vice-President Everett G Tr
Jan 1, 1959
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Metallurgy of Lead - Minor improvements Reported in Blast-Furnace and Refining PracticeBy Carle R. Hayward
THOUGH recent months have seen a rapid decline in lead-smelting activity and consequent uncertainty as to the future, the first half of the year showed progress in keeping with similar activity in oth
Jan 1, 1938
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Economics Of Pacific Rim CoalBy C. Richard Tinsley
Like most minerals, coal is inherently a demand-limited commodity. The very sedimentary nature of its occurrence implies greater availability potential than demand. But this situation is overridden by
Jan 1, 1982
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Institute of Metals Division - Elevated Temperature Phase Relationships In the Cr-Ni-Mn-N SystemBy E. J. Whittenberger
OVER the past two decades, the Cr-Ni stainless steels, popularly termed 18-8 steels, have been used in ever increasing amounts in the aircraft, automotive, chemical, transportation, and building indus
Jan 1, 1958
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Institute of Metals Division - The Selective Oxidation of Chromium in an Iron-Chromium- Nickel Alloy (TN)By R. P. Abendroth
This study is concerned with the kinetics of selective oxidation of chromium in a commercial Fe-Cr-Ni alloy. Selective oxidation of chromium in this alloy, by use of a low oxygen-potential atmosphere,
Jan 1, 1964
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New Design Of Open-Hearth Steel-Furnace Using Producer Gas.Discussion of the paper of Herbert F.. Miller, Jr., presented at the New York meeting, February, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 75, March, 1913, pp. 409 to 413. HENRY D. HIBBARD, Plainfield, N. J.
Jan 5, 1913
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Education For Engineering - Should Be Devoted 50% To Basic Sciences - 50% To Study Of Man Through Literature, History, Biology, Economics - Relegate Specifics To Graduate WorkBy Arthur F. Taggart
ENGINEERING education today is like a crazy quilt of somber wools and gaudy shoddy, chain-stitched on an academic assembly line, and sold at ever mounting prices to inexperienced youths for lifetime u
Jan 1, 1952
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Cyaniding Slime.By Mark R. Lamb
THE various methods of treating pulp in air-agitation tanks offer problems for experiment and study which are fascinating as well as practical. The usual method heretofore has been to fill each tank i
Jan 1, 1910
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Lumar - A New Development in the Stone IndustryBy Geo. W. Bain
PRODUCERS of building stone have had to seek new and attractive uses for their output to supplement the diminished orders for standard products. Lunar is the direct result of the need of new outlets f
Jan 1, 1936
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Lewis Emanuel Young, President, AIME, 1949By AIME
Lewis E. Young, who will formally assume his duties as President of the AIME at the Annual Meeting in San Francisco in February 1949, was born in Topeka, Kansas, Oct. 1, 1878. Dr. Young received his e
Jan 1, 1949
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Coal - Underground Anemometry - DiscussionBy Cloyd M. Smith
B. F. TiLLson*— The manifold difficulties of accurate anemometry in irregular sections of mine passageways, the irregular distributions of velocities in cross sections of the same, and the d
Jan 1, 1950
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Chicago Paper - The Chromite-Deposits on Port au Port Bay, NewfoundlandBy George W. Maynard
For an account of the discovery and the determination of chromite on Port au Port Bay I am indebted to Mr. Obalski, Government mining engineer for the Province of Quebec. He writes: " In June, 1894
Jan 1, 1898
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Geology - Mineralizing Solutions That Carry and Deposit Iron and SulfurBy B. S. Butler
AN understanding of mineralizing solutions and how they carry and deposit metals is of prime importance to students of ore deposits. Lindgren states: "The whole problem surely is very complicated. One
Jan 1, 1957
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Chattanooga Paper - Colored Mining LaborBy Alfred F. Brainerd
HAVING had considerable practical experience in the management of colored mining labor in the South, I have thought a few observations upon its peculiarities might interest those not personally famili
Jan 1, 1886
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New York City Paper - The Cost of Mining and Milling Gold-Ores in Nova ScotiaBy Willard Ide Pierce
CONSIDERING the extent of the gold-fields of Nova Scotia, which occupy an area of 6000 to 7000 square miles, a few words as to the cost of extracting and reducing the ores may prove of interest. Th
Jan 1, 1885
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Local Section News (87e42000-3162-49be-b76b-f25a4f0dd73f)Committee. ROBERT H. RICHARDS, Chairman. ALBERT SAUVEURr Vice-Chairman. AUGUSTUS H. EUSTIS, Secretary-Treasurer, 131 State St., Boston, Mass. TIMOTHY W. SPRAGUE. HENRY A. WENTWORTH. The thirtee
Jan 11, 1913