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John Markle?Honarary MemberBy JOHN MARKLE
JOHN MARBLE, mining engineer, coal operator, philanthropist, member of the Institute since 1879, vice-president in 1903-04, has been paid the well deserved tribute of Honorary Membership. The presenta
Jan 1, 1930
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Fundamental Relationships For The Steady State Of Several Grinding CircuitsBy Dietmar Espig
Very useful general relationships between operating parameters and the operating results for open- and closed-circuit grinding under steady- state conditions are described. The basic idea of the devel
Jan 1, 1984
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Principles Of Flotation, VII-Mercaptobenzthiazole As A Flotation Agent (8e157720-7109-44d2-803d-0cf477b58391)By Ian William Wark, Keith Leonard Sutherland
MERCAPTOBENZTHIAZOLE and its sodium salt are marketed under the trade names Flotagen and Flotagen S respectively, for use as collectors for cerussite and other minerals. The structural formulas for so
Jan 1, 1939
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An Evaluation Of Heat-Weakening Hard Rock As An Assist To Mechanic& TunnelingBy W. R. Davison, C. A. Brown, J. P. Carstens
INTRODUCTION The phenomenon of heat-weakening of rock with 10.6 micron radiation from a continuous-wave C02 gas laser has been investigated in detail at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for o
Jan 1, 1971
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Honor RollThe Honor Roll includes the names of all members of the Institute whom we know to be on active military duty at the date of its compilation, February 7, 1918. We are aware that there are many others o
Jan 1, 1923
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St. Louis Paper - Some Experiments on Cooking Coals under PressureBy E. T. Cox
WHILe engaged, in the year 1856, in determining the oil-bearing properties of some bituminous coals from Western Kentucky, by subjecting them to dry distillation in an iron retort, which held about a
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Iron and Steel Division - Kinetics of Vacuum Induction Refining-TheoryBy E. S. Machlin
The kinetics of vacuum distillation, vacuum-melt surface reactions, crucible-melt surface reactions and boiling are analytically investigated. No disagreement with experiment is obtained upon applying
Jan 1, 1961
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Fine Grinding At Supercritical SpeedBy R. T. Hukki
IT is no great exaggeration to say that present grinding practice and economics are largely determined by lining design. A record of outstanding liner wear can be achieved with any liner surface patte
Jan 5, 1958
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The Sintering Process and Some Recent Developments (72fd67c3-bd12-498e-80da-b5e45847fa85)By John Greenawalt
IN view of the increasing importance of sintering in the beneficiation of iron ores preparatory to their reduction in the blast furnace, the writer believes the time is opportune for an up-to-date, th
Jan 1, 1938
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Reaction Of The Living Body To Different Types Of Mineral Dusts With And Without Complicating Infection (0b855ecf-ef21-4a9e-bc91-17b46834fe18)By Leroy U. Gardner
EVERY reader of this paper is well aware of the fact that the prolonged inhalation of large amounts of free silica dust results in fibrosis of the lungs, and that other inorganic dusts, except those o
Jan 1, 1938
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Cleveland Paper - The Precipitation of Metals from Hyposulphite SolutionsBy C. A. Stetefeldt
Metallurgical processes cannot be conducted successfully With out the aid of analytical chemistry. The great perfection of Iead smelting in the West, for instance, has only been accomplished by the an
Jan 1, 1892
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Boron In Certain Alloy SteelsBy M. C. Udy, P. C. Rosenthal
THE use of minute boron additions to steel has been given considerable attention in recent years. Comparisons made between boron-free and boron-containing heats of otherwise identical analysis have in
Jan 1, 1946
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Technical Notes -Extraction of Silica from Wisconsin Gogebic Taconite by the Soda Ash Sinter ProcessBy T. D. Tiemann
Extraction of silica from the taconites of the Wisconsin Gogebic range by high temperature digestion in caustic solutions has been described.1,2 The ores consist essentially of hematite, goethite, a
Jan 1, 1964
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Easton Meeting - October, 1873The Institute assembled in the metallurgical lecture-room of Pardee Hall, Lafayette College, at 7 o'clock P.M. on Tuesday evening, October 21st. The session was opened by the President, R. W. Ray
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Technical Notes - Importance of the Iron Content of High-Purity AluminumBy M. Metzger, J. Intrater
IN the large number of important studies on high-purity aluminum (e.g., recrystallization and grain growth, creep, internal friction), it does not seem to have been generally recognized that the iron
Jan 1, 1954
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Measurement of Irreversible Potentials as a Metallurgical Research ToolBy R. H. Brown
EARLY workers attempted to study the structure of alloys by measurement of equilibrium electrode potentials in aqueous solutions containing ions of the metals from which the alloy was made.1 The metho
Jan 1, 1940
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The Effect Of Annealing Upon The Hardness Of Cold-Worked Ingot IronBy Charles Clayton
A study of the literature shows that the greater part of research work on annealing of cold-worked iron has been for the purpose of studying the effect on grain-size and properties other than hardness
Jan 2, 1926
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Some Experiments On Coking Coals Under PressureBy E. T. Cox
WHILE engaged, in the year 1856, in determining the oil-bearing properties of some bituminous coals from Western Kentucky, by subjecting them to dry distillation in an iron retort, which held about a
Jan 1, 1875
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Correlation of Earth Resistivity with Geological Structure and AgeBy R. H. Card
THE geophysicist is interested greatly in the resistivities of different formations or parts of the earth's crust; sometimes he is interested in a single figure in the nature of an average, or wh
Jan 1, 1937
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Zirconium and Hafnium MineralsBy Harry Klemic
Zirconium and hafnium minerals are used industrially both as minerals valuable for their chemical and physical characteristics and as ores of zirconium and hafnium. The principal zirconium-hafnium-bea
Jan 1, 1975