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Prospecting, Developing And Mining Semiplastic Fire Clay In Missouri (ce67a6b4-5bc1-454d-9e63-4711e265d5b6)By B. K. Miller, R. S. Bradley
THE principal producing areas of fire clay in Missouri are: (I) the east central district, which includes Audrain, Callaway, Montgomery, Warren, and Boone Counties [ ] (Fig. I); (2) the St. Louis di
Jan 1, 1941
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Industrial Minerals - Recent Developments in the Manufacture of Lightweight AggregatesBy John A. Ruppert, John E. Conley
LIGHTWEIGHT aggregates have been in use for many years in the United States but are now receiving more and more attention by manufacturers and users of concrete shapes. These shapes comprise building
Jan 1, 1951
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Washington D.C. Paper - Late Developments in Siemens Direct ProcessBy G. W. Maynard
In this paper I desire to embody the results of some personal observations of the working of the Siemens direct process as I witnessed it for a part of three days at the works of the Siemens-Anderson
Jan 1, 1882
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Papers - Mining - Mining and Transportation Practice in Minnesota Iron Mines (Mining Technology, March 1942) (with discussion)By Grover J. Holt
A detailed description of the many variations in iron mining and transportation practice in Minnesota would require much space. Since a fairly detailed description of the practices then in use was pub
Jan 1, 1943
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Effect Of Composition On Grain Growth In Aluminum-Magnesium Solid SolutionsBy Louis J. Demer, Paul A. Beck
As reported in a previous publication,1 isothermal grain growth in high purity aluminum and in an aluminum alloy with 2 pct magnesium can be adequately described by means of the empirical relation: [
Jan 1, 1948
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Papers - Constitution and Thermal Treatment - The S-curve of Chromium-nickel Steel (T .P. 1383, with discussion)By Blake M. Loring
Recently the S-curves for 30 to 40 alloy steels have been pub1ished.l.2 These steels show individual characteristics, which make each additional S-curve of great interest. There are important differen
Jan 1, 1942
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Description of Operations - The New England Mica Industry (Mining Tech., May 1946, T.P. 2024)By H. M. Bannerman, E. N. Cameron
During the years 1942-1934, about 125 New England deposits were mined for sheet and punch mica, and many others were briefly prospected. During this period the Geological Survey, United States Departm
Jan 1, 1948
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Zinc - Relative Rates of Reactions Involved in Reduction of Zinc Ores (Metals Technology, Apr. 1941.) (With discussion)By E. C. Truesdale, W. K. Waring
The Research,Division of The New Jersey Zinc Company (of Pa.) has conducted, over a period of years, numerous tests of the reducibility of various zinc ores and the reactivity of various kids of coal,
Jan 1, 1944
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Reservoir Engineering–General - A Simple Method for Correcting Spot Pressure ReadingsBy F. Brons, W. C. Miller
Pressure information for use in material-balance calculations is obtained, where possible, from pressure build-up surveys in shut-in wells. Using proper extrapolation methods, static pressures are obt
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Chicago Paper - Removal of Sulfur from Illuminating Gas (with Discussion)By W. A. Dunkley, W. W. Odell
The sulfur content of coal is perhaps more important in the manufacture of illuminating gas than in any other coal-using industry. Whether the gas is made by the distillation of coal in retorts or ove
Jan 1, 1920
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Petroleum and Gas - Review of Production of Petroleum in the United States in 1926By James H. Gardner
It is a striking fact in the domestic oil statistics of 1926 that with an increase in production of 13,000,000 bbl., there was nevertheless a lowering of both crude and gasoline stocks. It was the fir
Jan 1, 1927
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Chicago Paper - Mechanical Separation of Sulfur Minerals from Coal (with Discussion)By J. R. Campbell
A dozen years or so ago, the general superintendent of our company, now the president, Mr. W. H. Clingerman, asked me to study the coal-washing problem. This work brought me into contact with the best
Jan 1, 1920
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New York Paper - Certain Ore Deposits of the Southwest (with Discussion)By W. Tovote
This paper is based upon 12 years' experience in the Southwest, including three years that were spent in constant traveling as examining engineer for the Phelps-Dodge Corporation. The material wa
Jan 1, 1920
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Influence Of Size And The Stress System On The Flow Stress And Fracture Stress Of MetalsBy D. J. McAdam, G. W. Geil, D. H. Woodard, W. D. Jenkins
INTRODUCTION IN a series of papers, the authors and their associates have shown that the resistance of a metal to fracture is a function of all three principal stresses. 10-18,20,21,23,[1] Conseque
Jan 1, 1948
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Production Engineering and Research - A Statistical Approach to the Interstitial Characteristics of Sand Reservoirs (T.P. 1732, Petr. Tech., May 1944) (With discussion)By Jan Law
Problems of oil recovery are attacked from the approaches dictated by the two strikingly dissimilar complexes that comprise an oil reservoir—the fluid complex and the interstitial complex. Knowledge o
Jan 1, 1944
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Secondary Fertilizer MineralsBy R. P. Thomas
Secondary fertilizer minerals are the mineral materials used to supply directly and indirectly the secondary and trace plant food nutrient needs of a fertilizer. Since few soils contain sufficient ava
Jan 1, 1960
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New York Paper - Some Considerations Affecting Percentage of Extraction in Bituminous Coal Mines in AmericaBy H. H. Stoek
A study of Americarf coal-mine practice shows two of its distinctive features to be: A greater number of accidents per thousand employees than in any of the other leading coal-producing countries; a m
Jan 1, 1923
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Froths and Frothing AgentsBy W. L. Freyberger, R. B. Booth
Froth flotation is a chemically induced method for beneficiating or up- grading an ore, which utilizes a layer or column of froth as a separating medium to segregate and remove the valuable minerals f
Jan 1, 1962
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Cleveland Paper - The First Iron Blast-Furnaces in AmericaBy W. H. Adams
Shortly after becoming one of the van-guard of mine-developers in the State of Virginia, during the year 1883, I called the attention of the Institute to certain deposits of pyrites, which have been l
Jan 1, 1892
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New York Paper - Washed MetalBy Henry D. Hibbard, Edward L. Ford
The process of making washed metal now followed is in principle that described by Holley before this Institute in 1879, as the Krupp washing process. Sir Lowthian Bell also experimented extensively in
Jan 1, 1916