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Mining - Roof of the Pittsburgh Coal Bed in Northern West Virginia (With Discussion)By Lee M. Morris
The Pittsburgh bed, lying at the base of the Monongahela series, is probably the most famous bituminous coal bed in the world; famous not only for the product yielded in mining, but also as a key hori
Jan 1, 1931
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Milling Developments at the Benguet Consolidated PlantBy J. M. Morris
THE point to be made most clear in this paper is the economic value of flotation in the Benguet mill flow sheet. It is rather a statement of effect with no attempt at a technical explanation of the ca
Jan 1, 1936
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Mining MethodsBy C. H. Johnson
THE year 1952 has seen the continuance of the trend pointed out by Tell Ertl in this magazine a year ago, toward mechanization in metal and mineral mines. Outstanding progress has been made in the ado
Jan 2, 1953
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New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - The Inspection of Materials of Construction in the United StatesBy Alfred E. Hunt, Geo. H. Clapp
The great advantage to he gained by a careful inspection of all materials used in construction, in regard to safety and permanency, and to accuracy of workmanship, has been longer recognized in Great
Jan 1, 1891
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Atlantic City Paper - Estimated Costs of Mining and Coking and Relative Commercial Returns from Operating in the Connellsville and Walston-Reynoldsville Districts, PennsylvaniaBy Edward V. D’Invilliers
In connection with some recent professional work in the coalfields of Western Pennsylvania, with special reference to results of coking operations, I was asked to compile a statement giving the estima
Jan 1, 1905
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Shaft Drilling - Crownpoint ProjectBy Hassell E. Hunter
The Wyoming Minerals - Conoco Crownpoint Joint Venture represents the first time that big hole drilling has been exclusively used to develop a privately financed mine. Three shafts, one ten feet i
Jan 1, 1982
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New York Paper - The Physical Features and Mining Industry of PeruBy George I. Adams
Peru is divided into three regions—the coast, the ~ierra, or high mountainous region, and the " montaiia," or forest region of the Amazon basin. The Coast.—The coast is an arid region. No rain fall
Jan 1, 1909
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SilverBy Robert H. Leach
SILVER the whitest of all metals, has been used for thousands of years. Students of antiquity agree that silver, gold, copper, and their alloys were the first metals discovered by man and they have al
Jan 1, 1953
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Papers - Melting and Casting Metals - Comparison of Copper Wire Bars Cast Vertically and Horizontally (With Discussion)By L. H. de Wald, J. Walter Scott
It is usual practice in the copper industry to use open horizontal molds for casting tough-pitch copper wire bars.' A wire bar cast in this manner is partly characterized by heavy wrinkles and a
Jan 1, 1930
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A Comparison of Geochemical Exploration Techniques in the Carolina Slate BeltBy Paul C. Ragland, P. Geoffrey Feiss
The Piedmont province of the southern Appalachians is the focus of interest for many exploration geologists. In the past, only those deposits with significant surface exposure were exploited. Thus, fe
Jan 1, 1980
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Bleaching ClayBy A. D. Rich
THE term "bleaching clay" or "bleaching earth," as used in the oil industries, refers to clays that in their natural state, or after chemical or physical activation, have the capacity for adsorbing co
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - A New Instrument for the Magnetic Determination of Carbon in a. Steel Bath (T. P. 1132, with discussion)By H. T. Clark, H. K. Work
The instrument for the rapid determination of carbon in steel, described in this paper, was developed originally to facilitate the operation of the pilot-sized open-hearth furnace in the Jones & Laugh
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Yield Point of Single Crystals of Iron under Static Loads (T. P. 893, with discussion)By R. F. Mehl, M. Gensamer
Creep investigators have made extensive studies to determine the interrelation of stress, temperature and the tensile creep rates of metals. It has been suggested that at small stresses the secondary
Jan 1, 1938
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New York Paper - Manufacture of Semisteel for Shells (with Discussion)By Frank E. Hall
The needs of the World War showed the necessity of a metal stronger than cast iron which would supplement the supply of steel. SO patriotic metallurgists were spurred to new efforts to improve the sta
Jan 1, 1922
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New York Paper - Oil Resources of PeruBy V.F. Marsters
Peru has produced petroleum since the early seventies, the first work being in the Zorritos field, in the Province of Tumbes, adjoining Ecuador. In the early nineties, the Negritos field, in the De
Jan 1, 1923
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Papers - Aluminum-copper-nickel Alloys of High Tensile Strength Subject to Heat-treatment (With Discussion)By W. A. Mudge, Paul D. Merica
One of the most prominent features of our present-day industrial development is the ever-increasing demand put upon materials of construction. Engineering ingenuity, within the past 25 years, has been
Jan 1, 1935
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Geology - Radioactivity at the Caribou Silver Mine, Boulder County, ColoradoBy G. Carman Ridland
Front Range, Colorado: The majority of the rocks comprising the Front Range of Colorado are pre-Cambrian schists, gneisses, and intrusives which have been elevated to form part of the Southern Rocky M
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Copper and Brass - Internal Friction of an Alpha-brass Crystal. (Metals Technology, Sept. 1942)By Clarence Zener
The internal friction of nonferrous metals vibrating at low stress amplitudes has so far always been successfully interpreted in terms of inhomogeneities of one sort or another. Examples are the fluct
Jan 1, 1943
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Reservoir Engineering - Pressure Behavior in the Woodbine SandBy John S. Bell, J. M. Shepherd
pressure difference of 280 psi measured initially on opposite sides of the major fault in the Hawkins Field led to pressure determinations in the Woodbine sand throughout the East Texas basin. Conside
Jan 1, 1951
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Glen Summit Paper - A Hand-Telescope for Stadia-WorkBy Robert H. Richards
If one holds up a prism, or wedge of glass, with narrow angle, say l° to 2O, and compares the transmitted image with the image seen above or below the prism, the former will be found to be throw
Jan 1, 1892