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Steel for Aircraft ConstructionBy Edward Richardson
As DEVELOPED up to the end of the Great War, an airplane was essentially a mechanism of wood and fabric, joined and held together by metal fittings and, fastening. The engine and accessories, wire for
Jan 1, 1928
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A Tribute to the Mining EngineerA SELF-RESPECTING miner doesn't wash the cuttin's off his hard hat until he quits his job but, on the other hand, he keeps his lamp clean and a "spot" focus on the work at hand; the former
Jan 1, 1950
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New York Paper - Economic and Geologic Conditions Pertaining to Occurrence of Oil in North Argentine-Bolician Field of South America (with Discussion)By S. C. Herold
Considerable interest has been shown, during recent years, in the possibilities of developing oil fields in the South American Republics, now that the exhaustion of our present fields can be seen in t
Jan 1, 1920
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Building The WestIN CHAPTER I it was shown that the approximate market value of the copper produced at the twelve big Porphyry mines from 1905 to 1931, inclusive, was $2,821,300,000. This represented the refined metal
Jan 1, 1933
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Vacuum Dezincing of Desilverized Lead BullionBy T. R. A. Gokcen
THE possibilities of separating and purifying metals by high vacuum distillation were examined by Kroll.1 He suggested vacuum treatment for the removal of zinc from the lead produced after Parkes desi
Jan 1, 1954
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How Fire Tubes Should Be Made For Defending Or Assaulting Batteries Or Gates, For Burning Supplies, Or For Festivals.FIRE tubes are commonly made in order to frighten horses or to harm enemy soldiers, but although fire issues from them, they do not cause much damage because they cannot be used at a distance. If you
Jan 1, 1942
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Part VIII - Communications - High-Angle Substructure in Electron-Beam Zone-Melted TungstenBy D. R. Hay, E. Scala
STUDIES of structure-sensitive properties, especially mechanical behavior, have shown that grain and subgrain structure play an important role. The mechanical properties of tungsten, in particular, ar
Jan 1, 1968
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Natural Gas Technology - A Treatment of the Gas Percolation Problem in Simulation of Three-Dimensional, Three-Phase Flow in ReservoirsBy K. H. Coats
This paper describes an approximate technique for handling the problem of percolation of evolved gas upwards through the oil column in computer simulation of natural depletion. This technique has been
Jan 1, 1969
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Fluid Injection - The Estimation of Water Injection Profiles from Temperature SurveysBy T. J. Nowak
The heat flow processes determining the injection and shut-in temperature logs in a water injection well have been analyzed and the theoretical basis for determining the water injectivity profiles fro
Jan 1, 1953
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PART VI - Communications - Discussion of “Calculation of the Deformation Caused by Grain Boundary Sliding During the Creep of Polycrystalline Solids”By A. Gittens
In two recent papers stevens13,14 has compared the methods used by various investigators to calculate the contribution of grain boundary sliding to the total creep strain. In previous work Gittins15 h
Jan 1, 1968
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EPA Standards For SmeltersBy Fred Porter
Pollution problems from smelters may be unique in industry since the pollutants cover the wide range of SOx, particulates, carcinogens (arsenic), plus a number of heavy metals, the health implications
Jan 1, 1976
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Part VIII – August 1969 – Communications - Discussion of "A Reformulation of Fick's First Law for Solid-State Diffusion”*By A. D. LeClaire
This paper claims to provide a description of diffusion processes in solids which is said to be a reformulation of Fick's Laws and therefore, presumably, is supposed to be as general as those law
Jan 1, 1970
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A New Ore of Copper and its MetallurgyBy T. Sterry Hunt
THE Jones Mine (or Johannes Mine, as it was originally called, from a former proprietor), situated near Springfield, in the township of Caernarvon, Berks County, Pennsylvania, has long been known as a
Jan 1, 1876
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Recent Advances in ElectrochemistryBy Colin Fink
THE important developments within the past few years in electrochemistry, in particular in the electric furnace art, in electrometallurgy and in the methods of combatting corrosion are to be the subje
Jan 2, 1927
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Part V – May 1968 - Papers - The Erbium-Hydrogen SystemBy Charles E. Lundin
Pressure-temperature-composition data were obtainedfor the Er-H system. Measurements werecar-ried out in the temperature range of 473° to 1223°K, the composition range of erbium to ErH,, and the press
Jan 1, 1969
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Reservoir Engineering Equipment - A Technique for the Determination of Capillary Pressure Curves Using a Constantly Accelerated Centrifuge; DiscussionBy D. L. Luffel
This paper presents two main developments: (1) a short, constantly accelerated centrifuge method of measuring drainage capillary pressure properties of cores, and (2) a new analytic method of treatmen
Jan 1, 1965
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Need for Coal ResearchBy H. H. Lowry
SCIENCE attracts the attention and interest of an individual or an industry in general only in proportion to the apparent direct application to its immediate welfare or benefit. Engineering accomplish
Jan 1, 1936
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Heap Leaching ProblemsBy G. D. Van Arsdale
THE paper of Mr. Posnjak presents a laboratory confirmation of the well known facts that air ox-idation of pure solutions of ferrous sulfate is slow and difficult and that, like many other similar rea
Jan 7, 1927
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Studies Upon The Corrosion Of Tin, I - Potential Measurements On High-Purity Tin In Carbonate SolutionsBy Gerhard Derge
A SERIES of studies of the corrosion of tin is under way in the Metals Research Laboratory at the Carnegie Institute of Technology. The complete program includes examination of the corrosion propertie
Jan 1, 1938