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Nonmetallic Minerals ? New Deposits, New Methods, and New Uses, for a Variety of Industrial MineralsBy Oliver Bowles
A NORTH CAROLINA miner dreamed that he found high-grade mica by excavating a certain corner of his mine. The next day he sank a hole on the exact spot and found mica of excellent quality. The dream ca
Jan 1, 1945
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Mineral Industry Demands And General Market EquilibriumBy Richard Thomas Newcomb
Chapters 5a, 5b, and 6 discuss the long- run supply of minerals and the characteristics of reserve search and production peculiar to extractive industries. It is now necessary to complete the picture
Jan 1, 1976
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Positions Vacant (3b17ad23-221b-43b5-aee9-39a2cf368d92)Correspondent. Must be able, by virtue of, connection, to forward; daily ands weekly, reports, outlining, conditions affecting economics of. industries, particularly the metallurgical, and chemical, i
Jan 12, 1919
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Laying Panel Track At The Morenci Open PitBy Walter C. Lawson
THE primary objective in laying track in panel sections is to reduce the number of track laborers required. This is possible because the work is mechanized. Moreover, because the work is mechanized an
Jan 1, 1947
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Ore Concentration and Milling ? Greater Utilization of Gravity Methods For Finer Sizes Seen in Current PracticeBy E. H. Rose
IN a year of sober reflection and stocktaking after the mineral-squandering spree of World War II, the role that beneficiation of low-grade must henceforth play in American mineral industry has become
Jan 1, 1947
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New York Paper - Review of Present Status of Drill Steel Breakage and Heat Treatment (with Discussion)By Henry S. Burnholz, Charles Y. Clayton, Francis B. Foley
This work was first undertaken for the U. S. Bureau of Mines, in 1919-20, by C. E. Julihn, superintendent of the station at Minneapolis. Learning of the interest, in this subject, of B. F. Tillson, of
Jan 1, 1923
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New York Paper - Review of Present Status of Drill Steel Breakage and Heat Treatment (with Discussion)By Charles Y. Clayton, Henry S. Burnholz, Francis B. Foley
This work was first undertaken for the U. S. Bureau of Mines, in 1919-20, by C. E. Julihn, superintendent of the station at Minneapolis. Learning of the interest, in this subject, of B. F. Tillson, of
Jan 1, 1923
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Oil Refining from the Modern Viewpoint ? A Multitude of New Processes and New and Improved ProductsBy Gustav Egloff
AN unexpected and unprecedented demand for its products now challenges the petroleum industry. Between 1939 wand 1946, domestic oil demand increased nearly 45 per cent and in the first half of 1947 it
Jan 1, 1947
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Lithologic Controls on Subsidence (f474b715-e7e5-4cb2-83cf-d644e7a4e2db)By J. F. Abel, F. T. Lee
Subsidence is controlled by a complex com¬bination of mining and geologic factors. For example, a compilation of worldwide data shows that, as the percentage of shale in the overlying rock mass decrea
Jan 1, 1984
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Method of Curtailing Forces at the Copper Queen - DiscussionTHE CHAIRMAN (F. K. COPELAND,* Chicago, Ill.).-At this particular time conditions existing in this, country, and elsewhere, make all questions of milling or smelting or mining, or anything else, absol
Jan 12, 1919
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Institute of Metals ? Metallurgy of Minor Constituents An Important Factor In Recent ProcessBy H. OSBORG
THE patent literature of alloys for the last two decades or so indicates that the number of liatents referring to smaller and smaller percentages of essential alloying constituents is on the increase,
Jan 1, 1937
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Papers - New Wide-angle Aerial-survey Camera (T.P. 952)By A. W. Furbank
In reviewing the aerial cameras produced in different countries, it becomes apparent that in nearly all of them an attempt has been made to secure the greatest possible angle of view. This angle, of c
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - New Wide-angle Aerial-survey Camera (T.P. 952)By A. W. Furbank
In reviewing the aerial cameras produced in different countries, it becomes apparent that in nearly all of them an attempt has been made to secure the greatest possible angle of view. This angle, of c
Jan 1, 1941
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Coming EventsJan. 7, 1952, AIME, Boston Section, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Campus Room, Graduate House, Cambridge, Mass. Jan. 8, Society for Applied Spectroscopy, 6 pm, supper, Tosca's; 8 pm,
Jan 1, 1952
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Factors Affecting Investment in South American MiningBy NEWTON B. KNOX
THE war has forced the principal industrial nations of the' world into the strait jacket of a closely controlled economy; taxes have been heaped upon all enterprises in order to maintain the arme
Jan 1, 1944
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Physical Defects In Hollow Drill SteelBy Francis Foley
Small cracks in a plane normal to the axis of steels are found to be prevalent around the water hole of drill steels that have been in service for an unknown period of time. Cracks are not found on th
Jan 3, 1924
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Will Our Aluminum Plants Be Postwar White Elephants?By AIME AIME
BY the end of 1943, the United States will be able to produce aluminum at a rate of 1,150,000 tons a year. How much aluminum is 1,150,000 tons? It is sufficient to replace every railroad passenger car
Jan 1, 1943
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Special Methods for Beneficiation of Glass SandBy Paul M. Tyler
HISTORICAL concepts of the economics of the glass-sand industry are changing rapidly. The greatly expanded demand for glass containers combined with higher freight rates on raw materials and manufactu
Jan 1, 1950
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Sulfide Ores With Gold - Flotation and CyanidationBy R. S. Shoemaker, F. W. McQuiston
BENGUET EXPLORATION, Inc. Tuba, Benguet, Philippines 1970 Operating Data ORE DESCRIPTION: Complex ore mostly sulfides and composed mainly of sphalerite and pyrite with minor amounts of chalcop
Jan 1, 1975
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Died In ServiceBailey, Lewis Newton, Master Engineer, Senior Grade, 4th Regiment, U. S. Engineers, Headquarters Company, died of pneumonia at Camp Merritt, N. J., on April 30, 1918. Baird, Louis, Lieut., Royal Fiel
Jan 1, 1919