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Petroleum Division Plans Two Fall Meetings
By AIME AIME
THE Petroleum Division will hold two meetings this fall, one on the Coast at Los Angeles, Sept. 29, with the technical sessions in the assembly room of the California Oil and Gas Association and a ban
Jan 1, 1933
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Digest Of Reports On Technology - Plasticity Theory Applied To Rock Movement In Ore Passes
By E. P. Pfleider, W. G. Pariseau
Even as the rational selection of excavation equipment requires a matching of machine performance capabilities to rock response characteristics, the functional features of transportation systems must
Jan 6, 1968
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Mineral Industry Education Division Watching E. C. P. D. Developments
By Thomas T. Read
REVIEWING the events of the year in mineral industry education, a certain amount of either amusement or irritation, depending upon one's viewpoint, can be derived front the section dealing with m
Jan 1, 1935
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Discussions - Of Mr. Webster's Paper on Proposed Standard Specifications for Steel Forgings and Castings (see p. 170)
Gus C. Henning, New York City: In taking up the discussion of these specifications it is necessary that I give definitions of what I understand under the term " Specifications." There may be three kin
Jan 1, 1903
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Engineering Surface Coal Mines – Production Engineering
Planning for a surface coal mine includes selecting the best means and equipment for uncovering the coal, loading it, and transporting it to the preparation plant. The machines and methods that will e
Jan 10, 1967
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Mining Geologists Consider Their Why, and How
By AIME AIME
YOU can place an exclamation point after the "and How" if you want to, but the way it stands it sum¬marizes the Mining Geology sessions quite nicely; "Why" in the morning, "How" in the afternoon. It i
Jan 1, 1933
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Financing The Development Of Small Mining Projects - An Operator' s Viewpoint
By Fred H. Brooks
INTRODUCTION The toughest job for any mining company, large or small, is to locate and identify a property which it feels has the potential for development and which can be tied up through location
Jan 1, 1985
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Aluminum Metallurgy
By PAUL P. ZElGLER
Rapid growth of the aluminum industry continued through 1948 with an acute shortage of the metal in all forms marking the year. Estimates based on shipments made during the first nine months indicate
Jan 1, 1949
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Magnesium Industry
By J. D. Hanawalt
Significant strides were made in the year 1948 leading to further recognition of the place of magnesium as a common commercial metal, rather than as just a premium aircraft material. One of the factor
Jan 1, 1949
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Two New Hospitals Built by Phelps Dodge
By AIME AIME
MOTHER example of the broad field that is covered by the mining industry is the recent erection by the Phelps Dodge Corp. of a modern hospital building at Douglas, Ariz., and an identical one at the r
Jan 1, 1940
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Economic Effects of Recent Oil Discoveries in Illinois
By Joseph E. Pogue
THE period of new oil discoveries in Illinois began in February 1937, when The Pure Oil Co. found the Clay City field the forerunner of a number of limestone pools. The importance of the area was emph
Jan 1, 1939
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Petroleum Reserves Continue to Decline as Peacetime Use Exceeds Predictions - Five Measures Suggested to Bolster Oil Reserves and End Wasteful Extraction
By William B. Heroy
LOOKING back over the industrial and commercial progress of the United States during the last half century the outstanding influence has been the growth of the use of the fluid fuels, petroleum and na
Jan 1, 1946
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Industrial Service Movement of Y.M.C.A.
By J. Parke Channing
THE growth of and profession depends on meeting and solving new problems. It is a continuous process. 'A period free from new, or hitherto unknown, questions will be a period of arrested developm
Jan 1, 1921
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Discussions - Of Mr. York's Paper on Improvements in Rolling Iron and Steel (see p. 859)
Robert W. Hunt, Chicago, Ill.:—It has been my good fortune to know of this development of Mr. York's for some time, and I think he will permit me to say that this is not the first demonstration t
Jan 1, 1907
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Tonopah Extension Assay Office
By GEORGE L. CHRISTIAN
T HE Tonopah Extension assay office is a two- story, concrete structure on a solid foundation of andesite, situated about 100 yd. from the company's mill, so that it will not be affected by the s
Jan 1, 1921
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The Thirty-Hour Week of the Coal Miner
By S. A. TAYLOR
AN EDITORIAL on the Strike Situation in the Coal mining industry in the New York Evening Post of Nov. 4, 1919, gave what purported to be statistics of the Department of Labor, for a period of two week
Jan 1, 1920
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Alluvial Tin Mining In Malaya
By A. D. Hughes
A relatively small area in Malaya, about 200 miles long by 40 miles wide, is the most important source of tin in the world. Some tin is recovered in other parts of the peninsula. Of the tin mined, 98
Jan 1, 1949
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Chicago Paper - Effect of Sulfur in Coal Used in Ceramic Industries
By C. W. Parmalee
The ideal fuel for burning ceramic wares is the one that, among other characteristics, has little or no sulfur. For that reason wood was long considered the most desirable fuel but its high cost has p
Jan 1, 1920
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Its Everyones Business
FEB. 17-The past month found the average citizen backed off just a little more into his blind corner staring glassily at hydrogen bombs, unbalanced budgets, John L. Lewis, more inflation, a rising wav
Jan 3, 1950
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Iron And Steel Producers
By WALTER CARROLL
Between cross currents of economic factors and international expediencies the iron and steel industry in 1948 made an outstanding contribution to the general economic picture. Were it not for an unfor
Jan 1, 1949