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PART V - Communications - Electrolytic Preparation of Metal Phosphides
By Don H. Baker
THE need for new or improved refractory materials has caused metal phosphides to be given renewed scrutiny. Some metal phosphides show high-temperature inertness, are exceptionally hard, and exhibit a
Jan 1, 1968
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PART IV - Communications - Current-Potential Effects of Additives in Manganese Electrowinning – II
By Charles L. Mantell, B. G. Shah
SINCE the beginning of the industry, commercial electrolytic manganese has followed the Shelton patent' among others, which called for the addition of sulfur dioxide in controlled amounts, to a p
Jan 1, 1968
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Colorado Paper - The Smuggler-Union Mines, Telluride, Colorado
By J. A. Porter
In offering some data relative to this property, and the treatment of its ores, it is proper to say that a purely scientific article has not been attempted. It is hoped, however, that the economic con
Jan 1, 1897
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Licensing of Engineers Declared Unconstitutional-in Pennsylvania
JUDGE Samuel E. Schull, in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Monroe County, Pa., handed down a decision on July 2, declaring the Pennsylvania law for the Licensing of Professional Engineers and Land
Jan 8, 1923
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A Rule Governing Cupellation Losses
By W. J. Sharwood
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) CUPELLATION is well known to be one of the most effective methods of separating silver and gold from base metals and other impurities, as well as one of the m
Jan 8, 1915
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Routine Mine Sampling at Butte
By Donald Gilbert
PRIOR to July, 1919, the sampler at each mine of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. in Butte did his work in his own way and was responsible to the mine foreman only. At that time, the sampling at all the
Jan 2, 1922
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Prediction Of Crusher Power Requirements And Product Size Analysis
By Donald C. Moore
INTRODUCTION Published laboratory procedures used by the major crusher manufacturers for estimating crusher size are based upon techniques developed in the mid 1940's. Specifically, the two la
Jan 1, 1982
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The Contamination Of Metal Scrap, Its Effect On The Value, And Suggested Means Of Control (7b631fb4-648a-4516-9387-20defcbbf640)
By Carl Thieme
INDUSTRIAL specialization has rapidly created a demand for new and better alloys. A more thorough understanding of the requirements of specific industries and the discovery of processes by which it ha
Jan 1, 1928
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Iron and Steel Division - Rate of Reduction of an Oxide Sphere in a Stream of Reducing Gas
By Hillary W. St. Clair
An equation is derived for the rote of reaction of a sphere of metal oxide in a restricted enclosure through which a reducing gas is flowing. The equation takes into consideration the reaction rate co
Jan 1, 1965
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British and American Coal Mining Compared
By W. J. Shearer
A COMPARISON of statistics relating to coal min-ing in Great Britain and the United States leads one to suspect widely differing conditions and practice. A brief review of some of the conditions may e
Jan 8, 1928
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Halifax Paper - Note on the Contraction of Iron on Sudden Cooling
By Henry M. Howe
If a bar of wrought iron or steel is suddenly cooled from a bright red-heat, the contraction which then occurs is considerably greater than the expansion previously caused by heating the bar, so that
Jan 1, 1886
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Development Of The Dwight-Lloyd Sintering Process
By H. E. Rowen
As high grade iron ore deposits dwindle and costs rise, sintering becomes more and more important. The steel industry is now faced with beneficiation problems once peculiar to nonferrous work. Succeed
Jan 1, 1961
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Water Troubles In The Mid-Continent Oil Fields And Their Remedies -Discussion
I. N. KNAPP, Ardmore, Pa. (written discussion *).-The writer would first call attention to the fact that the mid-Continent field was credited from 1900 to 1915 with a production of about 641,000,000 b
Jan 5, 1919
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Papers - Description of Mills - Results in the Duquesne Mill of the Callahan Zinc-Lead Company
By Joseph C. Kieffer
The Duquesne property of the Callahan Zinc-Lead Co. is about 20 miles east of Nogales, in southern Arizona. One mine is near the mill, but most of the mill feed is hauled in by truck from a number of
Jan 1, 1943
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Conservation vs. Control of Profits
By Foster Bain
THOUGHTFUL people have raised questions as to how long nature's bank could continue to accept our drafts. These questions came to the fore so persistently, and there were so many evidences -such
Jan 8, 1922
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Pennsylvania Fire Clay
By L. C. Morganroth
CARBONIFEROUS CLAYS FROM a geological standpoint, but scant attention has been paid to fire-clay beds. Only within the last few years have they been the subject of individual investigation, prior to
Jan 2, 1916
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St. Louis Paper - Mining Engineering at the University of Illinois
By Theodore B. Comstock
Prior to 1885, the College of Engineering in the State University was under the care of such professors and instructors as were required for efficient work in the Schools of Mechanical Engineering, Ci
Jan 1, 1887
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Technical Notes - Stepped Austenitizing Treatment for 4340 Steel
By E. P. Klier, Volker Weiss, George Sachs
IT has been shown that the isothermal transformation of austenite in a special steel can be modified by isothermal holding in the high subcritical transformation range.' Since this treatment pote
Jan 1, 1958
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Bucket Wheel Excavators: How To Choose The Right One For The Job
By George E. Aiken
Modern high speed bucket wheel excavators (BWEs) can dig materials which power shovels can't handle without blasting. Yet these machines are not used in any large, open pit ore mines in the Unite
Jan 1, 1966
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Unit Operation of Oil Pool - Cooperation between Engineers and Lawyers
By Peter Q. Nyce
Law is as old as civilization. In its early stages the so-called law of the jungle, "the survival of the fittest," was entirely operative. Man was quite largely a law unto himself and was likewise his
Jan 1, 1931