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Electricity in Oil Fields - Use of Electricity for Oil-field Operations in Wyoming (with Discussion)By A. W. Peake, F. O. Prior
Considering the great advance in the development and application of electricity, it is not strange that eventually a big field for its use has been found in oil-field operations. So far as is known, t
Jan 1, 1928
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Institute of Metals Division - Recrystallization Texture and Coarsening Texture in High Purity AluminumBy P. A. Beck, Hsun Hu
It has been known for many years that in cold drawn polycrystalline aluminum the recrystallization texture is practically identical with the deformation texture.l,2,3 V. Goeler and Sachs4 stated that
Jan 1, 1950
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Structure of Cold-drawn TubingBy John Norton
THE tremendous increase in the use of metals that have been prepared by the various cold-working processes during recent years has greatly stimulated the investigation of problems concerned with the f
Jan 1, 1932
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Institute of Metals Division - The Constitution Diagram Tantalum-IridiumBy Nicholas J. Grant, William H. Ferguson, Bill C. Giessen
Ta-lr alloys have been examined over the complete range of compositions using metallographic and X-ray techniques. The terminal solid-solubility limits, solidus temperatures, and intermediate phases w
Jan 1, 1963
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The Location Of Mining Claims Upon Indian ReservationsBy Will Clark
HE who enters a mining claim within an Indian reservation of the United States of America acquires no rights thereby, because of the fact that the lands within such Indian reservation are not a part o
Jan 6, 1914
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Surface Tension and Contact Angles in Some Liquid Metal-Solid Ceramic Systems at Elevated TemperaturesBy B. C. Allen, W. D. Kingery
Surface tension and its temperature dependence have been determined for pure liquid Fe, Cu, Co, Ni, and Sn and for Fe-C, Co-C, and Ni-C alloys. The temperature coefficient of surface tension is nega
Jan 1, 1960
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Taking the Mining Industry to School (094a76e5-fe31-4337-a6e0-e7c432fc000d)By Douglas A. Sloan
Who would believe that young elementary school children could understand something as complex as the mining industry? The Challenge The challenge of accomplishing this is tremendous. An examinatio
Jan 1, 1981
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New York Paper - Recent Developments in Coal Briquetting (with Discussion)By Charles T. Malcomson
In the United States, improvements in methods of combustion have made possible the use of the smaller sizes of anthracite. This coal is now being reclaimed from the culm banks accumulated by the miner
Jan 1, 1915
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Chattanooga Paper - The Constitution of Copper-Iron and Copper-Lead-Iron MattesBy Ivan E. Goodner, Charles H. Fulton
The subject of the constitution of copper-iron mattes has received considerable attention in recent years by Keller,' Belles,2 Hofman,3 and Gibb and Philp.4 Still more recently Friedrich, Röntgen
Jan 1, 1909
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Production And Use Of Low-Temperature Char As A Substitute For Low-Volatile Coal In The Production Of High-Temperature CokeBy J. D. Price, G. V. Woody
MANY producers of by-product coke have spent considerable time and given considerable thought to the use of a substitute for low-volatile coal as an admixture with high-volatile coking coal for chargi
Jan 1, 1944
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Analysis and Considerations for Mining The El Teniente Ore BodyBy Alfonso W. Ovalle
INTRODUCTION The block-caving mining method is one of the most economical ways existing today to extract ore from nature. It is undoubtedly the least costly of the underground systems and moreover
Jan 1, 1981
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Transportation Hazards-Causes and PreventionBy Andrew Hyslop
IN our never ending search for new and better ways of underground mining, we find that transportation has had its share of new ideas in the past few years. The old and still effective method of track
Jan 1, 1948
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Aluminum - Extraction of Alumina from Clays by the Lime-sinter Modification of the Pedersen Process.By John H. Walthall, Raymond L. Copson, Travis P. Hignett
In October 1942, the War Production Board requested the Tennessee Valley Authority to undertake investigations to determine the feasibility of producing alumina suitable for reduction in aluminum cell
Jan 1, 1944
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Papers - Zinc - Slag Treatment for the Recovery of Lead and Zinc at Trail, British ColumbiaBy R. R. McNaughton
The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, Ltd. at Trail, B. C., inaugurated a comprehensive program of investigation about 15 years ago to develop the most economical process of recoveri
Jan 1, 1937
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Testing of Roof-Bolting Systems Installed In Concrete BeamsBy Rudolph G. Wuerker
MUCH descriptive matter[ ] has appeared on the subject of suspension roof supports, or roof bolting, as it is more commonly called. The wide- spread introduction of roof bolting into coal mines and me
Jan 6, 1953
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Industrial Minerals - Recharging Ground Water Reservoirs with Wells and BasinsBy M. L. Brashears
IN the last 15 years industrial use of ground water has more than doubled, and in 1951 amounted to 5 billion gallons per day. A similar sharp increase in the utilization of ground water for irrigation
Jan 1, 1954
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Physical And Chemical Factors In Copper Dump LeachingBy Yoon T. Auck, Milton E. Wadsworth
Column leach studies of two low grade prophyry copper ores were made with variables of size, flow rate, pH, drainage rate and tempature. Evidence is presented to show that, in some types of ores, sulf
Jan 1, 1973
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New York Paper February, 1918 - Phosphate in EgyptBy E. Cortese
Phosphate occurs in many places in Egypt, in two main zones: one in Upper Egypt, along the Nile Valley, principally on the right side, and one near the Red Sea coast. In the Nile zone, the principa
Jan 1, 1918
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Part VII - X-Ray Diffraction Study of Deformation of Nb(C b)-Re AlloysBy C. N. J. Wagner, E. N. Aqua
The bee alloys of the terminal solid solution of rhenium in niobium were investigated by X-ray diffraclion methods. The analysis of the broadening of the powder pattern peaks from the niobium-rich all
Jan 1, 1967
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Virginia Beach Paper - Discussion of Prof. Roberts-Austen's paper on recent advances in pyrometry (see vol. xxiii., p. 407)President H. M. Howe, Boston, Mass. (communication to the Secretary): Le Chatelier's pyrometer is certainly a most convenient and accurate instrument for the laboratory, and one that may be used
Jan 1, 1895