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Papers - Refining - Electrolytic Refining - The Nichols Series System of Electrolytic Copper Refining
By H. F. Johnson, C. S. Harloff
The Nichols series system of electrolytic copper refining has successfully maintained its strong competitive position in the copper-refining industry of today; therefore the improvements made in accom
Jan 1, 1934
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Lead - Some Experiments on Sintering Lead Sulphate Products (Metals Technology, June 1940.) (With discussion)
By G. L. Oldright, Henry de Rycker, S. F. Ravitz
The upper limit of richness of concentrates that can be smelted by means of the blast furnace without added diluents is fixed by the operation of sintering. A sinter feed with normal gangue constituen
Jan 1, 1944
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Industrial Research - Its Aims, Organization, And Facilities
By D. Swan
Industrial research may be defined as a critical and exhaustive investigation to create new and better ways of doing things. The results of industrial research are new and improved products, processes
Jan 1, 1959
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Radar And Sonar Probing Of Rocks
By R. R. Unterberger
Three different physical techniques have been used to see through or probe into rocks, so miners might know what is ahead or overhead. These are radar, sonar, and a unique type of sonar called nonline
Jan 1, 1985
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Mexican Paper - Notes on a Section Across the Sierre Madre Occidental of Chihuahua and Sinaloa, Mexico
By Walter Harvey Weed
The Republic of Mexico is traversed by many mountain ranges, and presents a great diversity of climates, soils and geographical features, yet its grander geographic provinces are few and peculiarly we
Jan 1, 1902
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Institute of Metals Division - Diffusion in the Fe-Ni System at 1 Atm and 40 Kbar Pressure
By R. E. Ogilvie, J. I. Goldstein, R. E. Hanneman
The interdiffusion coefficients for the Fe-Ni system were determined as a function of composition in both the a and y phases at 1 atm pressure. The inter diffusion coefficients were also determined in
Jan 1, 1965
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Mining Geology - Relations of the Disseminated Copper Ores in Porphyry to Igneous Intrusives
By W. H. Emmons
This paper is the third of a series treating of the relations of ores of the metals to igneous rocks. The first' outlined the general problem; the second2 proposed a classification of lode ores,
Jan 1, 1927
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Asbestos
By G. F. Jenkins
ASBESTOS is a general term embracing the fibrous varieties of a number of minerals. Of these, the hydrous magnesium silicate, chrysotile (H4Mg3Si209), a variety of serpentine, is the most abundant and
Jan 1, 1949
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Pittsburgh Paper - The Product of the Hibernia Iron-Nine, N. J.
By J. Wesley Pullman
It is stated by Dr. Tuttle in a paper read before the New Jersey Historical Society, that the celebrated Dickerson mine at Succasunna, Morris Co., N. J., yielded ore, about as early as 1710, for use a
Jan 1, 1886
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Model Studies on the Resistance of Airways Supported with Timber Sets
By G. B. Misra
Though resistance to flow offered by mine airways supported with timber sets has been an object of study over the last half century, no accurate relation has yet been established from which prediction
Jan 1, 1972
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Beneficiation of Rock Salt at the Detroit Mine
By R. J. Brison, W. C. Bleimeister
The International Salt Company has long been interested in finding an efficient process for the removal of impurities from rock salt, and particularly from the rock salt produced at the Detroit mine.
Jan 8, 1960
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Selecting Circuits To Prepare Beneficiation Circuit Feed From Primary Crusher Product (861b1e10-dc26-41bf-984f-5653de283b50)
By C. A. Rowland, M. D. Flavel
There are seven basic comminution circuits that can be used to prepare beneficiation feed from the product of a primary crusher. This paper gives a comparison of these circuits based on average proces
Jan 1, 1985
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Resources Potential Of Mineral And Metallurgical Wastes
By H. Shafick Hanna, Carl Rampacek
Wastes generated by the mining, mineral processing and metallurgical industries now total about 1.8 billion tons annually. The wastes include gases, dusts, solutions and a variety of massive solid min
Jan 1, 1980
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Copper Refining in the United States.*
By T. Egleston
THE materials containing copper which are refined in the United States, are, for the most part, the native, coppers of Lake Superior. Until quite recently but little pig copper was made for sale, and
Jan 1, 1881
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Book XI
By Herbert Clark Hoover, Lou Henry Hoover
DIFFERENT methods of parting gold from silver, and, on the other hand, silver from gold, were discussed in the last book; also the separation of copper from the latter and further, of lead from gold a
Jan 1, 1950
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - Mine-Caves Under the City of Scranton
By Eli T. Conner
My connection, under a commission from the Councils and Board of School Control of the city of Scranton, Pa., with a recent investigation of mine-caves and the resultant damages to surface-improvement
Jan 1, 1912
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Properties of Steel - Behavior of Metal Cavity Liners in Shaped Explosive Charges (Mining Tech., May 1947, and Metals Tech., August 1947, T.P. 2158) (with discussion)
By C. B. Clark, W. H. Bruckner
Since the end of World War II interest has been increasing in the use of shaped charges in the mining industry and in other industries using explosives for blasting purposes. Shaped charges employ the
Jan 1, 1949
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Properties of Steel - Behavior of Metal Cavity Liners in Shaped Explosive Charges (Mining Tech., May 1947, and Metals Tech., August 1947, T.P. 2158) (with discussion)
By C. B. Clark, W. H. Bruckner
Since the end of World War II interest has been increasing in the use of shaped charges in the mining industry and in other industries using explosives for blasting purposes. Shaped charges employ the
Jan 1, 1949
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Coal - Coal Utilization
By Martial P. Corriveau
Almost everyone agrees that coal and oil shale are the only fossil fuel resources in which the United States is self-sufficient. Of the two, only coal has a technology sufficiently developed to be of
Jan 2, 1974
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Institute of Metals Division - A Preliminary Investigation of the Zirconium-Beryllium System by Powder Metallurgy Methods
By H. H. Hausner, H. S. Kalish
IN recent years zirconium and beryllium have become of great interest because of their special properties. Zirconium is known for its remarkable ability to absorb the gases oxygen, nitrogen and hydrog
Jan 1, 1951