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New York Paper - Report of Committee on Taxation
The Committee submits the following report: The General Committee met in the Treasury Building at Washington on Oct. 6 and 7, 1919. At the first meeting, Cornelius P. Kelley was appointed chairman,
Jan 1, 1923
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Varying the Rate of Reduction on the Magnetic Properties, Ultimate Tensile Strength, and Resistivity of 18/8 Stainless Steel Wire
By Samuel Storchheim
IT was noted that variations existed in the magnetic properties, namely, coercive force, He, and rema-nence, Br, of 18/8 stainless steel wires of the same analysis when these wires were given the same
Jan 1, 1952
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Papers - Ground Movement and Subsidence - Ground Movement and Subsidence at the United Verde Mine (With Discussion)
By C. E. Mills
Studies of ground movement and subsidence resulting from mining operations cover a broad field. It is also a very important consideration and one that eventually affects nearly every mining operation
Jan 1, 1934
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Hardness Of Copper, And Meyer's Analysis
By Samuel Hoyt
THE hardness of annealed copper has been given in the literature and is easily obtained by any of the standard methods of hardness testing. It is not our intention to correct published values or to ad
Jan 2, 1926
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Surface Subsidence, Overburden Behavior, And Structural Damages Due To Longwall Mining - Two Case Studies
By D. Y. Geng, S. S. Peng
Surface subsidence of two longwall panels, one with a private residence and the other with an arch bridge, was monitored over a period of 1 to 1' ½ years. Surface subsidence data were analyzed i
Jan 1, 1984
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during the year 1935
By V. H. Wilhelm
During the first half of the year 1935, the oil industry in California was on a fairly profitable basis, owing mainly to the operation of the Petroleum Marketing Agency. Coincident with the discontinu
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during the year 1935
By V. H. Wilhelm
During the first half of the year 1935, the oil industry in California was on a fairly profitable basis, owing mainly to the operation of the Petroleum Marketing Agency. Coincident with the discontinu
Jan 1, 1936
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Plant Practice in Nonmetallic Mineral Flotation
By C. L. Ray, R. E. Baarson, H. B. Treweek
As an example of nonmetallic mineral flotation, the separation of several pegmatite minerals will be discussed in considerable detail, from both the laboratory-testing and plant-operation standpoints.
Jan 1, 1962
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Recovery Of Copper By Leaching, Ohio Copper Co. Of Utah
By Arvid Anderson
THE weathering of copper-bearing ores with the formation of a water-soluble salt and the recovery of the metal by leaching and evaporation or precipitation, are processes long known, which have at var
Jan 9, 1925
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Technological Advances In Polymeric And Composite Materials
By A. M. Lovelace
Introduction One area of engineering utilization of materials in which the requirements are especially rigorous and demanding is that of aerospace systems, including aircraft, helicopters, missiles
Jan 1, 1971
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Monograph Of Four Ore-Dressing Plants Owned By The Societe Miniere Et Metallurgique De Penarroya Treating Oxidized Ores Of Lead And Zinc
By Paul G. Raffinot
I. INTRODUCTION We are aware that as a general rule zinc and lead deposits located by the Mediterranean Sea contain important proportions of oxidized ores of lead and zinc (cerussite, anglesite, s
Jan 1, 1970
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Subsidence and Outbursts - Subsidence in the Sewickley Bed of Bituminous Coal Caused by Removing the Pittsburgh Bed in Monongalia County, West Virginia (With Discussion)
By S. D. Brady
In Monongalia County, West Virginia, the Pittsburgh and Sewickley beds lie west of the Monongahela River and underlie practically all the western end of the county. The average thickness of the Pittsb
Jan 1, 1931
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General - Aluminum-silicon-magnesium Casting Alloys
By L. W. Kempf, R. S. Archer
The binary aluminum-silicon alloys have certain characteristic advantages which are now well known, and these alloys have come into considerable use during the past several years.' Their field of
Jan 1, 1931
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New York Paper - Electrical Fume-Precipitation
By F. G. Cottrell
About a year and a half ago, at the San Francisco meeting of the American Chemical Society, in connection with the excursions to local smelting-works, I had occasion to show some lantern-slides illust
Jan 1, 1913
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Part VII – July 1969 – Communications - On the Self-Diffusion of Columbium
By Joshua Pelleg, G. M. Lindberg
THERE are three reported investigations of self-diffusion in niobium. Lundy et al.1 found their self-diffusion data well represented by the equation
Jan 1, 1970
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The Metallography of Tungsten-Discussion
PAUL D. MERICA,* Washington, D. C. (written discussion t).-This paper is a discussion of some of the results of a recent investigation1 of Prof. Zay Jeffries, and of his interpretation and generalizat
Jan 11, 1918
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Part IX – September 1968 - Papers - A Study of the Factors Which Influence the Rate Minimum Phenomenon During Magnetite Reduction
By P. K. Strangway, H. U. Ross
Briquets consisting of pure artificial magnetite, pure artificial hematite, and mixtures of the two were reduced by hydrogen in a loss-in-weight furnace at temperatures in the range 500° to 1000° .
Jan 1, 1969
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Cincinnati Paper - Tamping Drill-holes with Plaster of Paris
By Frank Firmstone
IN the summer of 1881 we were forced to break up and remove the large mass of iron which had accumulated under No. 2 furnace at Glendon, in order to prepare the foundations of the new furnace which ha
Jan 1, 1884
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Papers - Foreign Production - World Production during 1929
By Valentin R. Garfias
The world's petroleum production in 1929 is estimated at 1,479,335,-000 bbl., which represents an increase of about 157,000,000 over 1928, as compared with an increase of 61,000,000 bbl. in the p
Jan 1, 1930
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New York Paper - Moisture as a Component of the Volatile Matter of Coal (with Discussion)
By W. T. Thom
In previous classifications of coal, it has been customary to regard moisture eliminated from coal samples between 20 and 100 C. as extraneous matter, rather than as a constituent part of the coal. It
Jan 1, 1925