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A Countercurrent Column For Fluid-Bed Ion Exchange Of Uranium Ore SlurriesBy J. R. Ross, J. B. Rosenbaum
Bureau of Mines research has resulted in the development of fluid- bed ion-exchange columns for recovering uranium from slime pulps. In pilot plant tests, slime slurries containing up to 6 percent sol
Jan 1, 1973
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New York September, 1890 Paper - Interesting Vein-Phenomena in Boulder County, ColoradoBy John B. Farish
This brief paper is designed to place on record some interesting occurrences, recently observed during an examination of the Golden Age Mine, in Boulder county, Colorado. Leaving the little village
Jan 1, 1891
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Uses of Coal in the Ceramic IndustryBy H. E. Nold
THE raw materials of the ceramic industry are mostly clays. This raw material is ground, water is added and the mixture pugged into a moist, plastic, rather stiff mass. From this mass the desired unit
Jan 1, 1933
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Time-Dependent Volumetric Constitutive Relation For Fault Gouge And Clay At High PressureBy Chi-Yuen Wang, Chaw-Long Chu
The time-dependent volumetric constitutive relation for a San Andreas fault gouge and a consolidated kaolinite are experimentally determined at confining pressures to 200 Mpa, under creep condition an
Jan 1, 1982
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High-Temperature ThermometersBy R. M. Wilhelm
HIGH-TEMPERATURE thermometry,, as treated in this paper, deals with the measurement of temperature in the range 100° to 550° C. The lower limit corresponds to the temperature of boiling water at norma
Jan 9, 1919
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Volatilization Of Cuprous Chloride On Melting Copper, Containing ChlorineBy S. Skowronski
PURPOSE OF INVESTIGATION Since cuprous chloride melts at 418° C., boils at 954° C. to 1033° C.,1 and is known to be volatile at a much lower temperature, the presence of chlorine in any form in or on
Jan 2, 1919
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Cationic Flotation Of Oxides And SilicatesBy Ross W. Smith, Salim Akhtar
INTRODUCTION Flotation of oxide minerals, particularly silicates, with cationic collectors differs substantially from classic flotation of sulfide minerals using sulfhydryl collectors. In the case
Jan 1, 1976
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Report on AkremiteBy Charles M. Cooley
With explosives representing over 10 pct of the cost of operating the entire company, the Maumee Collieries Co., Terre Haute, Ind., inaugurated a program to develop a low-cost blasting agent. Results
Jan 5, 1955
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New York Paper - The Refining of the Precipitates Obtained by Means of Zinc in the Cyanide Process of Gold and Silver ExtractionBy G. Howell Clevenger
PAGE Introduction,............891 L Nature of Precipitates,.........892 11. Experimental Work Upon Alloys,......895 Silver,............895 Gold,............896 Conclusions,............896 111. Pr
Jan 1, 1904
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The Effect of a Coating of Polybutene on the Fatigue Properties of Lead Alloys ? with Discussion on Coatings for Lead AlloysBy George M. Bouton, Lawrence Ferguson
The experiments described in this publication were inspired by the Bell System's large interest in lead-alloy sheathed cables and by the wide range of fatigue and corroding conditions to which th
Jan 1, 1945
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A Theory Concerning Gases in Refined CopperBy A. E. Wells
IN 1866, Thomas Graham1 called attention to the volume of gases, three times the volume of the sample, evolved from a meteoric iron heated in an evacuated porcelain tube. From that time to this the oc
Jan 1, 1930
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Climax Dedicates Acid Leach-Charcoal Adsorption Process For Moly Oxide OresA new $18-million hydrometallurgical ore treatment facility for the recovery of molybdenum oxide was dedicated at Climax, Colo., on November 19 by Climax Molybdenum Co., division of AMAX. The Company
Jan 12, 1966
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A Tracer Technique To Measure The Diffusional Accessibility Of Matrix Block MineralizationBy L. M. Cathles, H. R. Spedden, E. E. Malouf
Fluid flow through an igneous rock formation will occur mainly through fractures. A non-diffusing or slowly diffusing tracer (such as .5µ silica spheres identifiable under electron microscope) will ar
Jan 1, 1974
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Technical Notes - Measurement of the Permeability of Set CementBy G. K. Dumbauld, B. E. Morgan
A satisfactory well-cementing composition must retain its fluidity long enough to be pumped into Place; then it must develop within a reasonable length of time sufficient strength and impermeability t
Jan 1, 1952
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Underground In Situ Mining- A New Mining MethodBy J. Wayne Erickson
Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent to discover or purchase uranium resources that cannot, or should not, be mined with conventional methods if human, natural and financial resources are t
Jan 11, 1978
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Student Associates (7f1322bc-2442-418c-9ea5-93e4f4f8d82e)Abbott, Argyle Campbell 1209 Sherwin Ave, Chicago, ILL. '29 Almstrom, Adne A., Student, Met. Engrg, Washington State College Pullman, Wash. '29 Ankedinoff, N., School of Mines, Univ. of
Jan 1, 1923
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Recovery Of Copper By CyanidationBy George W. Lower, Robert B. Booth
The use of cyanides in the extraction of gold and silver is well known1 Such extractions employ concentrations of cyanide in the range of 0.02-0.25% sodium cyanide equivalent in leaching cycles of 24-
Jan 11, 1965
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Progress In High Pressure-Temperature MineralogyBy William A. Bassett
Two very intense sources of electromagnetic radiation are contributing significantly to experimental studies of minerals at high pressures and temperatures: 1) A Q-switched YAG laser is able to prod
Jan 1, 1985
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Billion-Dollar Expansion of US Iron Pellet Facilities is UnderwayIn 1974, iron pellet production in the Great Lakes region reached the 53-million-tpy level, accounting for more than 88% of the nation's pellet production. By 1978, pellet output from the Great L
Jan 11, 1975
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X-ray Metallography - Texture of Metals after Cold Deformation (With Discussion)By Franz Wever
The importance of the Widmanstätten structure to structure theory in metallography has been recognized by many writers.l It is a structure produced by the precipitation of a, new phase from a solid
Jan 1, 1931