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Its Everyones BusinessAPPLICATIONS for loan contracts for the exploration, development and mining of strategic and critical metals and minerals are now being accepted by the Department of the Interior. The RFC is authorize
Jan 12, 1950
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Chicago Paper - Discussion of Prof. Branner's paper on the Cement Materials of Arkansas (see p. 42)Robert T. Hill, Washington, D. C.: Having studied very minutely the geology of the district referred to by Prof. Branner, I beg to state that his quotation of my classification of the Cretaceous depos
Jan 1, 1898
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Metal Mining - Diamond-Drill Blasthole Stoping and Jumbo Drill Mounting Among the Notable ImprovementsBy E. D. Gardner
AGAIN in 1945, the fourth year of World War 11, the American mining industry met the necessary demand made upon it for metals. Lack of labor prevented full production in some districts; maximum output
Jan 1, 1946
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Drilling–Equipment, Methods and Materials - Laboratory Drilling Performance of the Full-Scale Rock Bit (with discussion)By F. H. Deily, D. S. Rowley, R. J. Howe
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Milling Activity Largely Confined to Gold-Silver PlantsBy Charles E. Locke
SHARP CONTRAST exists in the reports so helpfully contributed by the individual members of the Milling Committee for this review. Those engaged in the milling of gold and silver ores report great acti
Jan 1, 1935
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Discussion of Mr. Rothwell's paper on Correspondence-Schools (see p. 338)H. H. Stoek, Scranton, Pa. (communication to the Secretary): Mr. Rothwell's condemnation of my paper on the International Correspondence Schools as not giving an impartial view of the whole field
Jan 1, 1900
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Improved Mining and Cleaning Practice Seen in Coal IndustryBy R. Dawson Hall
LONG regarded as nearly worked out, the anthracite region still shows promise of a hundred years of life, for means are being found to get bottom, top, pillar, and other coal that earlier generations
Jan 1, 1935
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Chamber-Pillars In Deep Anthracite-Mines.By Douglas Bunting
(Wilkes-Barre Meeting, June, 1911.) WITH the gradual exhaustion of the upper veins in the anthracite coal-fields, the problem of mining at greater depths acquires increasing importance and demands th
Sep 1, 1911
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Development of Modern Copper SmeltingBy C. R. Kuzell
STAFF: Editor, Gerhard Derge Carnegie lnstitute of Technology Schenley Pork Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Editorial Assistant, M. A. Redmerski Production Editor, Otto T. Johnson THE METALL
Jan 1, 1961
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Mining and Economic Conditions in the Tri-State' DistrictBy J. C. HEILMAN
THE Tri-State district, named from its situation in three States, lies in the northeast corner of Oklahoma, the southeast corner of Kansas and the adjacent part of Missouri east of the common corner o
Jan 1, 1931
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Consulting Engineers (marked with an asterisk in the Geographic Section)NORTH AMERICA ALASKA Anchorage.-Ames, M. B. Culver, H. W. Fiedler, H. L. Geehan, R. V. Langneas, O. O. Layfield, R. A. Parent, A. Saarela, L. H. Strandberg, H. Candle.-Robbins, J. S. Chichagof.-Ru
Jan 1, 1942
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9. Ore Deposits of the Southern AppalachiansBy Robert A. Laurence
Ore deposits in the Southern Appalachians are ( 1) sedimentary or syngenetic, ( 2) epigenetic, and ( 3) residual. In general, deposits characteristic of high temperature and pressure are found in the
Jan 1, 1968
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The Science of Metals Grows Apace - Many New Alloys and Methods of Treatment ? IntroductionBy Robert F. Mehl
PROGRESS in the general field of nonferrous physical metallurgy during the past .year has been uneventful but healthy. A continued increase is apparent in the number of useful alloys and in the mechan
Jan 1, 1936
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Other Schools (7cbabd85-a693-4911-a91a-2cce3c4633d4)By Thomas T., Read
IT is difficult to judge how much influence the success attained during its first year, 1864-65, by the School of Mines at Columbia had on developments in education for the mineral industry elsewhere
Jan 1, 1941
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Study of Structural Problems by Geophysical Means Gains in ImportanceBy Sherwin F. Kelly
GEOPHYSICS may be considered a vice (albeit, I submit, a comparatively harmless one) whose career is aptly described by Pope's lines: Vice is a monster of so frightful mien, As to be hated need
Jan 1, 1936
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The Conditions Of Accumulation Of Petroleum In The Earth.By David T. Day
IN 1897 I published a proposed explanation t for the variation in color and specific gravity of Pennsylvania oils. A resume of this subject was also presented at the First International Petroleum Cong
Jun 1, 1910
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Twenty Years Progress in FlotationBy F. L. Bosqui
NO metallurgical process developed in the last half century has been more widely advertised to both technologists and lay- men, or has done more to promote efficiency and economy in the extraction of
Jan 1, 1940
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Part XII – December 1968 – Papers - Measurements of Young's Modulus of PoIycrystaIIine Nickel-Tungsten Alloys at Elevated TemperaturesBy William C. Harrigan, William D. Nix
Dynamic measurements of Young's modulus have been made for poly crystalline Ni-W alloys from room temperature to 800°C. The alloys studied range in composition from pure nickel to Ni-10 at. pct
Jan 1, 1969
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Dragline Dredges - a New Way to Mine Placer GoldBy Merrill, Charles White
MOST extraordinary of the technical developments in placer gold mining during the last five years has been the rise of the dragline dredge, by which is meant a floating washing plant for auriferous gr
Jan 1, 1938
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Nickel Clad Steel Plate WorkBy Robert J. McKay, F. P. Huston, WILLIAM G. HUMPTON
THE manufacture of nickel-clad steel plate and the fabrication of articles from it has progressed far enough to permit a general description of the working methods used. The manufacture of sheets made
Jan 1, 1931