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Washington Paper - The Inadequate Union of Engineering Science and ArtBy A. L. Holley
The application of scientific methods to the investigation of natural laws and to the conduct of the useful arts which are founded upon them, is year by year mitigating the asperity and enlarging the
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St. Louis Paper - Coal Wastage (with Discussion)By Francis S. Peabody
This paper will not be a technical paper, because, although I have been in the business of mining and selling coal for 30 odd years, I am neither a mining engineer nor a practical miner. If I digress
Jan 1, 1918
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Shrinkage Stopes - Mining Methods of the Telluride District (with Discussion)By Charles N. Bell
The Telluride mining district of southwestern Colorado is defined by the 37" 45' and 38" parallels of latitude and 107" 45' and 108" meridians of longitude. Telluride was never a boom cam
Jan 1, 1925
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Papers - Cleaning - Re-treating Middling’s from Coal-washing Tables by Hindered-settling Classification (With Discussion)By H. Y. Yancey, B. M. Bird
One of the problems studied by the U. S. Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the University of Washington has been the re-treatment of table middlings. Hydraulic classification has given the best resu
Jan 1, 1930
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Petroleum Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Venezuela during 1928 (With Discussion)By H. J. Wasson, E. B. Hopkins
Throughout 1928, production of oil from Venezuela steadily increased, and at the close of the year, the output was at the rate of nearly 400,000 bbl. a day. The total for the year was approximately 10
Jan 1, 1929
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Chicago Paper - Research in the Coal-mining Industry (with Discussion)By E. A. Holbrook
Research, primarily, is finding out the truth. Research applied to enigeering opens the door to new principies and processes, the application of which benefits mankind in a material way. The engineer
Jan 1, 1920
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General - Directional Properties in Cold-rolled and Annealed Copper (With Discussion)By Arthur Phillips, E. S. Bunn
During the past few years considerable interest has been shown in the study of fiber, and its effect, in wrought metals. Fiber has recently been defined as a "condition of parallelism of important lin
Jan 1, 1931
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The Magnitude and Significance of Flotation in the Mineral Industries of The United StatesBy Charles White Merrill, James W. Pennington
No metallurgical process developed in the 20th century compares with froth flotation in its effect on the mineral industry. Processes like gravity - concentration, amalgamation, and pyrometallurgical
Jan 1, 1962
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Titanium (636393c2-fba2-4078-9ed7-3d5d0e1321e7)TITANIUM is one of the most abundant elements in the minerals that make up the earth's crust but its use in industry is only a generation old; yet probably no other important commercial mineral r
Jan 1, 1949
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Variables in Coal SamplingBy J. B. Morrow
WITH numerous plans under consideration for coal classification, and with the advent of the Bituminous Coal Code, the intelligent sam-pling of coal has become increasingly important. To us it is rathe
Jan 1, 1935
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Minerals Beneficiation - The Use of Curvilinear Multiple correlation Analysis in Computer Simulation of Complex ModelsBy W. H. Yarroll
This paper presents a general discussion of the utility of the statistical technique known as multiple correlation, and gives three specific examples of its application. The first demonstrates the mos
Jan 1, 1968
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Barium Minerals (e1aeef57-f42c-41da-abfb-e3c4fc907150)By Donald A. Brobst
The minerals barite (BaSO4) and witherite (BaCO3) are the chief sources of the element barium and its compounds needed for many industrial processes and products. Barite, the principal ore mineral, is
Jan 1, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - Recovery of Cold Worked High Purity Al-Mg AlloysBy E. C. W. Perryman
The recovery of X-ray line broadening, hardness, and electrical resistivity from cold worked AI-Mg alloys has been investigated. The results, together with those from density measurements, suggest tha
Jan 1, 1957
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Gold And Silver As Monetary MetalsBy William F. Butler, Mo-Hung Che
DEVELOPMENT OF MONEY AND MONEY STANDARDS This chapter is concerned with the rise, and then the decline and fall, of gold and silver as monetary metals. As a first step in tracing the history of th
Jan 1, 1976
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Prospecting for Anthracite by the Earth-resistivity Method (0744d7f4-1d29-43dc-9996-05a87690b850)By Maurice Ewing
THE purpose of this paper is to present the results of the application of the earth-resistivity method of subsurface investigation to the problem of locating seams of anthracite coal beneath a mantle
Jan 1, 1936
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New York Paper - The Manganese Ores of the Lafayette District, Minas Geraes, Brazil (with Discussion)By Benjamin LeRoy Miller, Joseph T. Singewald
For a number of years Russia, India and Brazil have outranked all other countries as producers of manganese ores. During the 5 years immediately preceding the European war, the average annual producti
Jan 1, 1917
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Jigs (66244d73-07e6-449e-8e86-69feaa50ae52)By David R. Mitchell, Byron M. Bird
THE revision of this chapter has presented a problem in that heavy-medium jigging has come into the picture since the chapter was originally written (seven years ago), a practice in which an artificia
Jan 1, 1950
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Institute of Metals Division - A Metallographic Study of Solute Segregation during Controlled Solidification in Tin-Lead AlloysBy H. Biloni, G. F. Bolling
The microsegregation in tin specimens containing 0.2, 0.5. or 1 wt pct Pb has been studied m detail. The specimens were grown from the melt in a controlled fashion and exhibited a well-developed cellu
Jan 1, 1963
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The Book Cliffs Coal Field, Utah (59fc71b6-863e-4b74-bc15-d4b43dcc3673)By Robert Lewis
THE Utah coal field to which the name Book Cliffs is applied runs in a northeast direction from Mt. Hilgarde, in Sevier county, along the escarpment of the Wasatch Plateau to the vicinity of Castle Ga
Jan 7, 1914
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Part VI – June 1969 - Papers - Activity of Carbon in Fe-C Alloys at 1150°CBy Shiro Ban-ya, John F. Elliott, John Chipman
The activity of carbon in Fe-C austenite at 1150°C has been determined for concentrations up to about 2.1 pct C using the equilibrium: C + COz = 2CO; equations have been derived expessing the activity
Jan 1, 1970