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Manufacture and Properties of Bessemer Steel (b7619fe9-a677-4408-9485-5304e746daa1)
By C. C. Henning
IN any line of human activity logical handling requires an amount of attention to each phase that is in keeping with the importance of that phase. In the complex and rapidly changing field of modern f
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Kinetics of the Decomposition of Austenite at Constant Temperature (T. P. 964, with discussion).
By J. B. Austin, R. L. Rickett
Measurements of the rate of decomposition of austenite at constant temperature are commonly represented by plotting the percentage transformed on linear coordinates against time on either a linear or
Jan 1, 1939
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Concentration - Mill Flowsheets and Practices - Milling Practice at New Lead-zinc Concentrator of Phelps Dodge Corporation (Mining Tech., July 1947, TP 2192)
By R. C. Thompson
The lead-zinc mill of Phelps Dodge Corporation, Copper Queen Branch, Mines Division, Bisbee, Arizona, is about 3 miles from the main hoisting shafts of the Junction and Campbell mines at Lowell. All t
Jan 1, 1949
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Industrial Researches upon Heat and Combustion
By P. H. Dudley
I HAVE taken the liberty of calling the researches herein mentioned industrial, to distinguish them from those strictly scientific, where every known appliance is used to insure accuracy in determinin
Jan 1, 1876
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The Future of the American Iron and Steel Industry
By Zay Jeffries
THE history of the development of our great iron and steel industry has been recorded in many publications, not the least important of which are the TRANSACTIONS of the American Institute of Mining an
Jan 1, 1930
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Magnetic Separation of Iron-Ore
By Clinton M. Ball
Magnetic iron-ore is found in many localities throughout this and other countries, in large bodies and in convenient proximity to other materials required for its conversion into iron and steel; and t
Jan 1, 1896
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Duluth Paper - Photographing the Interior of a Coal-Mine
By Fred P. Dewey
IN preparing material for the exhibit of the National Museum at the New Orleans Exposition in 1881, it was decided to attempt to photograph the interior of a coal-mine, in order to get a strictly trut
Jan 1, 1888
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Papers - - Production Engineering and Engineering Research - Properties of Hydrocarbon Mixtures as Related to Production Problems (With Discussion)
By W. K. Lewis
During the last decade the petroleum refinery engineer has made great progress in achieving a better understanding of the physical behavior of hydrocarbon mixtures, with particular reference to their
Jan 1, 1934
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A New Roasting Furnace for Zinc Flotation Concentrate
By Charles Fulton
This paper describes experiments carried on at the Case School of Applied Science, together with their results. Their success led to the design of the larger furnace herein described, but which has no
Jan 10, 1924
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Twinning In Copper And Brass
By Albert J. Phillips
As EARLY AS 1824, Haidinger1 described crystals of native copper that were, according to Dana,2 "probably twinned parallel to the octahedral plane and normal to this axis." In 1837, Rose3 very clearly
Jan 1, 1928
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Production in Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia
By V. C. Smith
Reliable and detailed statistical data available for Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia are the most meager and unsatisfactory of any of the producing states. Detailed histories and statistics are avail
Jan 1, 1934
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Primary Crushing - History
The earliest U. S. patent on a crushing machine was issued in 1830. The device incorporated the drop hammer principle later used in the famous stamp mill, whose history is so intimately linked with th
Jan 1, 1978
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Institute of Metals Division - Aging Behavior of a Zinc Alloy Containing 25 pct Manganese, 15 pct Copper, 0.1 pct Aluminum
By P. W. Ramsey, G. L. Werley
THERE have been numerous examples in recent years of the similarity between aging behavior and diffusion behavior, where a plot of the logarithm of the aging rate versus the reciprocal of the absolute
Jan 1, 1951
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Ground Movement from Mining in Brier Hill Mine, Norway, Michigan
By George Rice
A PROBLEM of possible subsidence of the surface from mining opera-tions, which might have had disastrous results, arose in 1913 at the Brier Hill mine, of the Penn Iron Mining Co., near Norway, Mich.,
Jan 1, 1934
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New York Paper - An Experiment in One-piece Gun Construction (with Discussion)
By P. W. Bridgman
During the war, the Navy undertook the construction, under my direction, of an experimental gun embodying features designed to lessen the cost and time of production. These experiments were initiated
Jan 1, 1922
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The Stability Of Natural And Man-Made Slopes In Soil And Rock
By H. Q. Golder
With the development of open-pit mines of ever increasing depth, the stability of the pit slopes in soil and rock is of growing economic importance. How is it, considering the newness of the problem
Jan 1, 1972
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Asbestos Deposits Of Georgia*
By Oliver Hopkins
As prefatory to the body of this paper, a few general statements will be made (1) in regard to the history and importance of the asbestos industry, (2) as to the principal sources of the raw material,
Jan 9, 1914
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The Precipitation of Copper from the Mine Waters of the Butte District.
By J. C. Febles
HISTORY. THE use of iron for the precipitation of copper was known at least as early as the fifteenth century. Both Paracelsus and Basil Valentine refer to it in their writings, as early as 1500 A. D
Jan 7, 1913
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New Determinations of the Coefficients of Fric¬tion of Lubricated Journals, and on the Laws Governing Such Friction
By R. H. Thurston
THE writer became convinced, many years ago, that the generally accepted values of the coefficient of friction for lubricated surfaces were not applicable to such heavy machinery as he had been called
Jan 1, 1879
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Structure of Iron after Drawing, Swaging, and Elongating in Tension
By Charles Barrett
PLASTIC flow in metal crystals and the changes in orientation resulting from it are generally understood to take place by the following funda-mental mechanisms: (1) slip on crystallographic planes, (2
Jan 1, 1939