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Modern Hydraulic Mining in Florida With a Survey of Beneficiation PracticeBy C. V. O. Hughes
Florida phosphate operations are unique in the ways standard mining equipment is made to meet specialized problems. Hydraulic mining and transportation has evolved in meeting three such special proble
Jan 1, 1956
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Pyrolysis And AgglomerationBy Fred D. DeVaney
Probably no ferrous metallurgical process has ever found such ready acceptance and rapid expansion as the pelletizing of iron ores. The process was first commercialized in the early 1950's and si
Jan 1, 1971
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Part III – March 1969 - Papers- Neutron-Induced Carrier-Removal Effects in SiliconBy Don L. Kendall, Martin G. Buehler
A simple physical model has been developed to fit carrier-removal data in silicon irradiated near room temperature with reactor spectrum neutrons. Commonly observed donor and acceptor defect energy le
Jan 1, 1970
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Characteristics Of Philippine Porphyry Copper Deposits And Summary Of Current Production And ReservesBy Dan E. Lewis, William E. Saegart
Similarities of certain geologic and mineralogic parameters are recognized among the various Philippine porphyry copper deposits. Lowell and Guilbert3 described a model of the typical porphyry copper
Jan 1, 1978
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Longwall Ventilation Planning At Jim Walter Resources’ No. 3 MineBy John W. Stevenson
At Jim Walter Resources Alabama coal property, the first of twelve projected longwall mining systems started to operate In March, 1979, at the No. 3 Mine. The second longwall started to mine adjacent
Jan 1, 1981
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Solar Ponding As A Mineral Recovery Step In Solution MiningBy David S. Butts
The high cost of energy has made many solution mining corporations turn from fuel consuming evaporators to solar energy and solar ponds. The generally held concept of a solar pond is an area enclosed
Jan 1, 1985
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Work Of U. S. Shipping BoardDuring the nineteen months in which our country was actively engaged in the war, the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corpn. expanded the shipbuilding capacity of the United States from an
Jan 7, 1919
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How To Promote Plants In Mine WastesBy William A. Berg
Vegetation on mine wastes was an important topic at the International Symposium on Ecology and Revegetation of Drastically Disturbed Areas held at Pennsylvania State University August 3-16, 1969. This
Jan 1, 1970
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Modern Equipment Cuts Costs at BagdadBy Ernest R. Dickie
IN 1945 the Bagdad Copper Corp. decided to change from block caving to open-pit mining. By early 1948 the conversion was completed and production was increased from 1500 tons per day to 4000 tons per
Jan 9, 1951
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Making The Most Of Wire RopeBy Robert E. Goodwin
There are four main requirements to be considered in selecting a wire rope that will provide the best service. A proper choice is made by correctly estimating the relative importance of each of these
Jan 5, 1969
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Coming EventsOct. 3, AIME, National Open Hearth. Southern Ohio Section, Deshler-Wallick Hotel, Columbus. Ohio. Oct. 10, AIME, Eastern Section, National Open Hearth Steel Committee, Harwich Hotel, Philadelphia.
Jan 1, 1952
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Improvement of the OPAP Uranium Recovery Process from Phosphoric AcidBy M. S. Tsai, Y. D. Chuang, H. M. Wu
To contact the commercial OPAP-kerosene solution with CH3OH – H20 solution, we used the appropriate concentration of DOPAP / MOPAP solvent. By using this treated OPAP solvent, uranium can be recovered
Jan 1, 1984
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Update: Underground Mining in the USUS underground mine production of nonfuel minerals was 153 million tons of crude ore in 1971, according to a recent US Bureau of Mines report compiled by Dravo Corp. Underground capacity includes all
Jan 7, 1975
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Shock-Wave-Induced Fragmentation Of Copper PorphyriesBy Catherine T. Aimone
Specimens of copper-bearing quartz monzonite were subjected to a plane shock wave simulating high compressional stresses in the proximity of a borehole wall. Fragmentation was studied as a function of
Jan 1, 1984
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Institute of Metals Division - Magnesium-lithium Base Alloys-Preparation, Fabrication, and General CharacteristicsBy J. H. Jackson, P. D. Frost, C. H. Lorig, L. W. Eastwood, A. C. Loonam
It is well known that for equal weights of material, thin sections of the lighter structural alloys are more resistant to buckling under a compressive stress than thin sections of more dense material.
Jan 1, 1950
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Reservoir Engineering-General - A Viscosity-Temperature Correlation at Atmospheric Pressure for Gas-Free OilsBy W. B. Braden
This paper presents a suitable method for predicting gas-free oil viscosities at temperatures up to 500F knowing only the API gravity of the oil at 60F and the viscosity of the oil measured at any rel
Jan 1, 1967
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Effect Of Metal Depth On Slag Volume In Electric FurnaceBy M. T. McDonough
THE data relative to the effect of metal depth on slag volume was obtained from the operation on two acid electric furnaces in which heats of various sizes were produced. The furnaces used were of 3 a
Jan 1, 1947
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Draw Control in Principle and Practice at Henderson MineBy Victor deWolfe
INTRODUCTION The Henderson Mine, located near Empire, Colorado, utilizes a continuous panel caving system to extract ore as one of the world's major producers of molybdenum. Any mine using a
Jan 1, 1981
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Part VIII - Communications - Redistribution of Oxygen and Iron During Zone Refining of ZirconiumBy D. Mills, G. B. Craig
ZIRCONIUM has been float-zone-refined in an electron-beam furnace and the redistribution of oxygen, iron, and tungsten has been measured. The iodide zirconium used in the present experiments initially
Jan 1, 1967
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Reservoir Engineering- Laboratory Research - Application of Air-Mercury and Oil-Air Capillary Pressure Data in the Study of Pore Structure and Fluid DistributionBy W. B. Hickman, J. J. Pickell, B. F. Swanson
Many physical properties of the porous media-immiscible liquid system are dependent upon the distribution of fluids within the pores; this in turn, is primarily a function of pore structure, liquid-li
Jan 1, 1967