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Borehole TV Camera Gives Geologists Inside Story
By Nicholas M. Short
Many a geologist or driller has wished he could somehow climb into a borehole to see for himself what fractures looked like. Or why recovery was poor. Or how the bit was actually lost. Now it is possi
Jan 1, 1963
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New York Paper - Sound Steel Ingots. A Discussion
Chairman James F. Kemp :—I call upon Prof. Albert Sau-veur to open the general discussion on the subject of sound steel ingots. Albert Sauveur, Cambridge, Mass.:—I believe that I have the privilege
Jan 1, 1914
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Anson Greene Phelps
By Robert Glass Cleland
THE BEGINNING of a large enterprise is often as in- significant as a lump of leaven hidden in a bowl of meal or a handful of mustard seed that the wind blows across a field. In 1950 the company known
Jan 1, 1952
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Institute of Metals Division - Notch Sensitivity of Refractory Metals
By R. I. Jaffee, F. C. Holden, H. R. Ogden, A. G. Imgram
The tensile and notch tensile properties of four refractory metals (molybdenum, tungsten, niobium (columbium), and tantalum) and one alloy (Mo-0.5Ti) were investigated. All the materials were evaluate
Jan 1, 1962
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Alabama Flake Graphite In World War II
By Hugh D. Pallister, Richard W. Smith
The Alabama flake-graphite industry has flourished only in times of war when importations of foreign graphite for crucible use have been greatly curtailed or cut off. World War I was a boom period and
Jan 1, 1945
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Minerals Beneficiation - Compression Testing of Green and Dry Iron Ore Pellets
By John M. Karpinski, David S. Cahn
A new device based on a constant rate of loading has been developed for the compression testing of green and dry pellets. This device has a lower test variation for green pellets than the existing con
Jan 1, 1969
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Limestone and Dolomite
By Donald D. Carr, Lawrence F. Rooney
Perhaps no other mineral commodity in this volume has as many uses as limestone and dolomite. These carbonate rocks are the basic building blocks of the construction industry, the material from which
Jan 1, 1975
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Mine Gases
By Jed H. Mosgrave
One of the most interesting of all the subjects required of persons studying the different facets of coal mining is coal mine gases. Some mine gases have been a real problem since the very beginning o
Jan 1, 1973
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Howard I. Smith, Chairman, Industrial Minerals Division, A.I.M.E.
By AIME AIME
WHEN H. I. Smith joined the Institute back in 1908, he was an instructor in mining and metallurgy at Penn State the college from which he had graduated the year before with a B.S. degree. He had not g
Jan 1, 1943
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Other Publications of the Year - A. I. M. E. Pamphlets and Technical Publications, 1921-1927
Trans. Pamphlet Volume Number Title
Jan 1, 1927
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Bumps in No. 2 Mine, Springhill, Nova Scotia (5dc712ac-98ff-4b5c-b179-6a000f6a7206)
By Walter Herd
FOR the past eight years No. 2 mine of the Cumberland Railway & Coal Co., Springhill, Nova Scotia-a subsidiary of the Dominion Coal Co., Ltd.-has had an unenviable reputation for bumps. As the working
Jan 1, 1929
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Structure and Ore Deposition at Cartersville, Georgia (1659dbd1-021c-4e6b-985e-0cf7356a2f49)
By Thomas Kesler
THE Cartersville mining district, 35 miles northwest of Atlanta, Ga., has been of varying but continuous importance in the southern mineral industry during the past century. Noted chiefly for its prod
Jan 1, 1940
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Radar Exploration Through Rock in Advance of Mining (2f3426f9-2525-47ab-91b4-d6e2d34df6ab)
By John C. Cook
Long-wave short-pulse radar has been shown capable of exploring to distances of several hundred feet through massive, dry rock salt. Exploration distances of 30 to 60 ft through bituminous coal and ma
Jan 1, 1974
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List of Members, Associates and Junior Associates ?Geographical (3a9493a3-083d-47f1-9c9d-039358d2a227)
ALABAMA Aldrich.-Lloyd, T W Anniston.-Carrington, F G Gerber, A B Heimrod, A A. White, H E Ashland.-Barton, J C Sturdevant, J C Bessemer.-Abbott, C E Ball, T L Hines, H K Hodgkin, W -0. Salmon,
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - A Method for Distinguishing Sulphides from Oxides in the Metallography of Steel (with Discussion)
By George F. Comstock
It seems a common opinion among metallographists that all light-gray inclusions seen with the microscope in polished sections of steel are manganese sulphide. Examples of this belief are continually a
Jan 1, 1917
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Mining History At Cornwall, Pa.
By Robert G. Peets
After 216 years, the end of operations at the Corn- wall mine can be foreseen within the next two decades. The story starts in 1732 when three sons of Wiliam Penn-John, Thomas, and Richard-deeded 96
Jan 7, 1957
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Use Of Manganese Alloys In Open-Hearth Practice
By Samuel L. Hoyt
THE present report represents that part of the work that has been done by the War Minerals Investigation, Manganese Section, of the Bureau of Mines, on the use of manganese alloys in open-hearth pract
Jan 2, 1919
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Industrial Minerals Role in 1962
By Lauren A. Wright
General prosperity marked the industrial mineral industries of the U.S. and Canada in 1962. For most commodities, production and sales exceeded 1961 figures, and for several commodities, all-time prod
Jan 2, 1963
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Petroleum Economics - Engineering Economics of Long Petroleum Pipe Lines (T. P. 1433, with discussion)
By Edgar G. Hill
Much has been written and said recently about the methods used and materials and equipment employed in building the long tubes that criss-cross a great part of the United States, like the pattern o
Jan 1, 1942