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New York September, 1890 Paper - The Pratt Mines of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company, AlabamaBy Erskine Ramsay
The following description of the Alabama coal-,fields is taken (with slight omissions) from the report " On the Warrior CoalField, by Henry McCalley, A.M., C. and M. E., Assistant State Geologist:"
Jan 1, 1891
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Treatment Of Mine Water For Domestic UseBy Robert Wamsley, W. E. Jones
ONE of the earliest problems in the life of any community is the provision of an adequate supply of water sufficiently free from all types of contamination to be suitable for domestic purposes. Gener
Jan 1, 1945
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Treatment Of Coal Surfaces (36a70ac5-b2b8-4ab8-b017-0a01a22c10ac)By Ralph A. Sherman, J. M. Pilcher
BY surface treatment of coal is meant the application of a material, either solid or liquid, to the surface of pieces of coal. The purposes of surface treatment are varied. They may be to identify or
Jan 1, 1950
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Bureau Of Mines Research On The Hydrogenation And Liquefaction Of Coal And LigniteBy Lester L. Hirst, Arno C. Fieldner, Henry H. Storch
EXPERIMENTAL work on liquefaction of coal was taken up by the Bureau of Mines in 1936 when it became evident that a prudent policy from the national point of view should include preparation for the ti
Jan 1, 1944
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The Conservation of phosphate Rock in the United StatesBy W. C. Phalen
INTRODUCTION NOBODY will dispute the fact that the conservation in every legitimate manner of our valuable high-grade phosphate-rock deposits is a present-day problem of importance. The table and cu
Jan 10, 1916
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Slurries, Sludges, Slimes And Water Treatment (484d41af-5d0b-4e5c-9358-a57ac2d3ac85)By David R. Mitchell, E. A. Reilly, G. R. Gardner, F. P. Lasseter
THE methods that may be applied to the treatment of slurries and water, as these are related to practical coal-preparation problems, are concerned essentially with the movements of solids suspended in
Jan 1, 1950
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Geographical ListNORTH AMERICA ALASKA Anchorage.-Culver, H. W. Geehan, R. W. Strandberg, H. Chicagof.-Russell, J. C. Tracy, Q. S. College.-Dorsh, J. B. Fox, E. F. Joesting, H. R. Smith, M. C. Wilcox, H. G. Dougla
Jan 1, 1941
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Part II - Papers - The Association Between Crack-Opening Displacement and Fracture ToughnessBy J. L. Swedlow, M. L. Williams
Two standard techniques for assessing fracture initiatlon in sheet specimens involve measurements of 1) the applied load of fracture which, via linear fuacture mechanics, is used to find the fractu
Jan 1, 1968
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Recent Developments In The Tennessee Phosphate Industry (e1169a5a-ede0-4cad-a4f2-6024619b187b)By Herbert R. Mosley, Paul M. Tyler
STRATEGICALLY situated in almost the heart of the leading fertilizer- consuming area of the United States, Tennessee long has ranked second only to Florida as a phosphate-producing state. Since 1932 i
Jan 1, 1939
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PIMA: A Three-Part Story – Geology – Open Pit – MillingBy J. F. Olk, E. D. Spaulding, R. E. Thurmond, G. A. Komadina, R. W. Hernlund, J. A. Journeay
THE Pima pit is a 1700x1400-St oval, the long T axis parallel to the strike of the orebody. The north side of the pit is carried as a final pit slope that coincides with the footwall of the orebody. T
Jan 4, 1958
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Proceedings Of The One Hundred Fifteenth Meeting, St. Louis- Joplin-Miami-TulsaOct. 8 to 13, inclusive, 1917 COMMITTEES Committee on Arrangements H. A. BUEHLER, Chairman W. E. MCCOURT, Secretary C. J. ADAM L. L. HUTCHISON VICTOR RAKOWSKY J. A. CASELTON EUGENE MCAULIFFE J.
Jan 12, 1917
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PART V - Papers - Electron-Microscopy Studies of Transformations in a Ti-V AlloyBy R. Taggart, D. H. Polonis, J. C. McMillan
Thin foil electron microscopy techniques have been used to study the micros tructure of a Ti- 7.5 wt pct vanadium alloy in the quenched and aged cond_itions. Selected area diffraction has identified a
Jan 1, 1968
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Titaniferous Magnetite Deposits Of The Lake Sanford Area, New YorkBy Robert C. Stephenson
LARGE deposits of titaniferous magnetite occur associated with anorthosite and gabbro in the Lake Sanford area, Essex County, New York. The ore, gabbro, and anorthosite show consanguineous relations.
Jan 1, 1945
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One Phase of the Problem of Increasing the Consumption of CopperBy H. H. Stout
THE high copper price during the war stimulated the capacity to produce far beyond a possible normal consumption. The curves in Fig. 1 show this. The line YZ indicates, what the world production a
Jan 11, 1922
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Chicago Paper - Microscopic Metallography (See Discussion, "Physics of Steel," vol. xxiii.)By F. Osmond
When a metal (whether a simple substance, an alloy, or a compound) presents, in each of the smallest parts to which it can be redueed by mechanical division, a constant chemical composition, it is def
Jan 1, 1894
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Hydrotator Coal-cleaning ProcessBy W. L. Remick
WHEN the senior author of this paper presented an article on Fine Coal Cleaning by the Hydrotator Process,1 at the February, 1927, meeting, that process had been developed in the anthracite region onl
Jan 1, 1929
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Geology - Canadian Deposits of Uranium and ThoriumBy W. F. James, Richard Murphy, S. N. Kesten, A. H. Land
Introduction—by W. F. James and A. H. Lang This paper describes the geology and present state of development of uranium and thorium deposits in Canada. It is expected that this information will be
Jan 1, 1951
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Data Pertaining To Gas Cleaning At The Düquesne Blast FurnacesBy A. N. Diehl
IT is the object of this paper (1) to deal with the elements in blast-furnace gas from the standpoint of their importance, and the part they are to play in future consumption, and (2) to give detailed
Jan 5, 1914
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New York Paper - Graphitization of White Cast Iron (with Discussion)By R. S. Archer
The proper representation of equilibria involving graphitic carbon in the constitutional diagram of the iron-carbon system is admittedly an unsolved problem, the complete solution of which will probab
Jan 1, 1922
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Part V – May 1969 - Papers - Dissolution of UC Particles in Uranium During Postirradiation AnnealingBy G. L. Kulcinski, R. D. Leggett
Irradiated uranium containing 635 ppm of carbon, mostly in the form of UC precipitates, was annealed at temperatures from 650" to 900°C under hydrostatic pressures of 0 to 1000 bars. Postirradiation e
Jan 1, 1970