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Mining Geologist's Service to the Mineral Industry
By Reno H. Sales
Since leaving school my efforts have been geared to the task of making geology useful to the mining industry. The responsibility of the economic geologist or mining geologist of today has grown to be
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - New Method for Welding Together Ferrous Metals by Application of Nest and Pressure (With Discussion)
By Leonard C. Grimshaw
The idea of bonding two dissimilar ferrous metals, and making use of both, is an old one. Tips have been brazed onto tool shanks for many years. The bonding of larger pieces to form whole bars and she
Jan 1, 1936
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Stress-Corrosion Tests of Bridge-Cable Wire ? with Discussion on Bridge-Cable Wire
By R. E. Pollard
The National Bureau of Standards received, in August 1940, a number of samples of bridge wire taken from the cables of the General U. S. Grant suspension bridge over the Ohio River at Ports- mouth, Oh
Jan 1, 1945
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New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute October, 1890 Paper - Notes on the Bessemer Process
By Henry M. Howe
The striking features of American Bessemer practice aré its large output and its low initial silicon and initial temperature. These are interdependent. Large outputs implies short blows and short inte
Jan 1, 1891
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Annealing Of Commercial Copper To Prevent Embrittlement By Reducing Gases
By Susasn Leiter
THAT oxygen in copper has been a source of trouble is well known and that that trouble has been real in the commercial world has been shown by Fuller.1 Moore and Beckinsale's paper2 at the annual
Jan 2, 1926
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Papers - Variants Influencing Austenite Grain Size as Determined by Standard Methods (With Discussion)
By C. L. Shapiro, R. Schempp
DuRing the past few years, general interest in the steel-producing and steel-consuming industries has been centered on the so-called "inherent characteristics" of steels. While often vaguely described
Jan 1, 1937
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Papers - New Method for Welding Together Ferrous Metals by Application of Nest and Pressure (With Discussion)
By Leonard C. Grimshaw
The idea of bonding two dissimilar ferrous metals, and making use of both, is an old one. Tips have been brazed onto tool shanks for many years. The bonding of larger pieces to form whole bars and she
Jan 1, 1936
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Institute of Metals Division - Magnesium-lithium Base Alloys-Preparation, Fabrication, and General Characteristics
By J. H. Jackson, P. D. Frost, C. H. Lorig, L. W. Eastwood, A. C. Loonam
It is well known that for equal weights of material, thin sections of the lighter structural alloys are more resistant to buckling under a compressive stress than thin sections of more dense material.
Jan 1, 1950
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Production of Low-temperature Coke by the Disco Process
By C. E. Lesher
Low-TEMPERATURE carbonization needs no introduction to the literature on coal. This paper will attempt no review of that literature; it tells the story of the commercial development of one of the proc
Jan 1, 1940
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Choosing a Composition for Low-alloy High-strength Steel
By S. Epstein
THE new low-alloy high-strength steels are obviously here to stay. With 75 per cent higher yield strength and 50 per cent higher tensile strength than plain carbon structural steel, they permit 20 to
Jan 1, 1936
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Action Of Hot Wall: A Factor Of Fundamental Influence On The Rapid Corrosion Of Water Tubes And Related To The Segregation In Hot Metals
By Carl Benedicks
IT is well known by every one who has had to deal with boiler tubes that these are often seriously affected by a sort of corrosion, occurring as a local pitting, that frequently causes a perforation o
Jan 4, 1925
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Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile
By H. C. Schultz
CERTAIN local conditions were known to govern in large measure the successful adaptation of liquid-oxygen explosives to the large-scale blasting at Chuquicamata. The wide variation in hardness of the
Jan 1, 1928
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New York Paper - Metallography of Steel for United States Naval Ordnance (with Discussion)
By Harold Earle Cook
The purpose of this paper is to state briefly the inspection requirements of the Bureau of Ordnance, the specifications governing the inspection, and the physical and chemical properties of the steel
Jan 1, 1916
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A Petrographic Study of Lead and Copper Furnace Slags
By Roy McLellan
THE slags derived from the smelting of lead and copper ores are composed essentially of silicates. The problems arising from the smelting of these ores consequently involve the study of silicate fusio
Jan 1, 1930
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A Glossary Of Mining And Metallurgical Terms
By R. W. Raymond
THE absence of a convenient glossary of terms connected with mining and metallurgy has long been felt by the general public. It is to meet this want, not to furnish a technical manual for experts, tha
Jan 1, 1881
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Papers - Non-Metalic Minerals - Development of the Grande Ecaille Sulfur Deposit
By Wilson T. Lundy
The history of the production of sulfur from salt domes in Louisiana and Texas originated with the operations of the Union Sulphur CO. at Sulphur, La., followed by the Freeport Sulphur Co. at Bryanmou
Jan 1, 1934
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Hot Deformation Structures, Veining And Red-Shortness Cracks In Iron And Steel
By Axel Hultgren, B. Herrlander
THE original aim of the present investigation was to study the mechanism of cracking on hot-deforming red-short steels. During the microscopical examination of hot-deformed soft steels attention was d
Jan 1, 1946
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Petroleum Division Finds Economics of Dominant Interest
By Earl Oliver
SEVERAL notable papers, and free discussion on many controversial subjects, marked the various sessions of the Petroleum Division at the annual meeting. The Division first convened on Tuesday afternoo
Jan 1, 1932
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Contents And Introduction - Looking Back-1958 Looking Ahead-1959
ECONOMICS In the preceding pages you will find an attempt to judge the direction of one phase of the mining industry in Drift, and following that a quick round up of what happened to production in
Jan 2, 1959
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Donald Burton Gillies - A.I.M.E. President, 1939
By AIME AIME
EVEN in the choice of his birthplace and parents, Donald B. Gillies indicated clearly the trend of his professional career. He was born on Nov. 4, 1872, at Bruce Mines, in Ontario. His father and moth
Jan 1, 1938