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Improved Pilot Hole Surveying Method Aids Shaft Extension At Calloway Mine An Innovation In Hole Surveying Held Error To 1 Ft Per 354.5 Ft Of Hole Drilled
By R. Lee-Aston
HALLOWAY mine of Tennessee Copper Co. at Copperhill, Tenn., has been under development for several years. It has two shafts, the A shaft, 1336 ft deep from the surface to the 16 level, and the B shaft
Jan 3, 1958
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The Beginnings Of Mineral Industry Education
By Thomas T., Read
THE education of adolescents to perform the duties and assume the responsibilities of maturity has been a characteristic of human society since the dawn of history. In the beginning the members of the
Jan 1, 1941
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Employment of Mining Engineering Graduates in the United States
By William B. Plank
RECENT interest in the character of employment of young mining engineering graduates has been stimulated by my studies, during the past ten years, of student enrollment and employment of graduates of
Jan 1, 1938
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Nonferrous Metallurgists Hear About Zinc, Lead, Aluminum, Magnesium, and Nickel
By Wm. E. Milligan
DESPITE the zero weather of Monday, the morning meeting on nonferrous ore-reduction metallurgy got under way promptly under the efficient control of Arthur A. Center. The first and third portions of t
Jan 1, 1943
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Index (dde4dfae-41ca-4a3d-b609-807fa42b9a6a)
Jan 1, 1934
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Safety Methods for Metal Mines
By B. F. Tillson
ALTHOUGH most accidents occur through the A carelessness or misfortune of the workmen; that is no reason why we should not take all physical precautions practicable. The best way to approach the probl
Jan 1, 1926
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Application of Steel Castings in Mining Equipment
By William M. Sheehan
TRANSPORTATION is one of the most important problems of the mine operator and the possibilities of cost reduction in this field should not be overlooked. In the railroad industry, cars and locomotives
Jan 1, 1933
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Salt Resources Of West Virginia
By Paul H. Price
The history of the salt industry in West Virginia dates back nearly two hundred years; however, the history of salt as an important raw material for the chemical industry is much more recent. The ea
Jan 1, 1949
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Ferrous Production Metallurgy
By M. W. Lightner
IN 1947 the steel industry rebounded from its wartime effort and produced a record-breaking peacetime tonnage of steel ingots. During the first six months of the year the industry produced 42,000,000
Jan 1, 1948
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Geophysical Prospecting - Subaqueous Exploration Is Promising -Active Work in Canada - Many New Oil Fields Discovered
By Sherwin F. Kelly
MANY baffling problems of crustal geology-of warping and folding, elevation, subsidence, and great dislocations of the earth's surface-may now be on the verge of yielding to the science of geophy
Jan 1, 1938
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Drilling And Sampling Unconsolidated Materials
By Leon W. Dupuy
Many articles have been written describing peculiar and particular types of drilling. Little correlation has been made between the character of ground to be drilled and sampled and the type of drillin
Jan 1, 1949
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Increasing Responsibility of the Engineer in Public Life
By Mark Eisner
ONE'S JOB is the watershed down which the rest of one's life tends to flow write the Lynds in the first pages of their classic social study, "Middletown in Transition." Certainly engineers w
Jan 1, 1940
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Engineers in Industry
By T. M. Girdler
INDUSTRIAL progress and development in this country from the earliest daps to the present has proceeded at an ever-quickening pace. Yet during recent decades the nature of our industrial progress and
Jan 1, 1939
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Discussion - Of Mr. Grammer's Paper on a Decade in American Blast-Furnace Practice (see p. 124)
Edward A. UehliNg, New York City (communication to the Secretary*):—In adding my mite to the discussion, I wish to touch on a few points which bear emphasizing and perhaps a little further elucidation
Jan 1, 1905
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Electrical and Metallurgical Improvements At Kennecott's Utah Copper Division Mills
By R. J. Corfield
MODERNIZATION of the entire electrical system and improvement of Rotation process efficiency is the twofold goal of the improvement program underway at the Arthur and Magna concentrators of the Utah C
Jan 3, 1953
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Emergency Methods Used by the German Iron and Steel Industry
By BERNARD PLANNER
PRODUCTION COSTS, profits, and quality are the primary factors in the peacetime production of iron and steel. In a war emergency, as high production rates and as complete utilization of readily availa
Jan 1, 1942
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Iron Ore Treatment as an Economic Problem
By Carl Zapffe
JUST as 85 per cent of the total ore produced annually in the United States comes from the Lake Superior region, so does one of its six producing districts-the Mesabi --dominate that region both as to
Jan 1, 1938
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Southern California Holds Separate Petroleum Meeting
By AIME AIME
AN enthusiastic crowd, cheerfully confident that the upturn in the oil industry has arrived, gathered in Los Angeles on Sept. 29 for a Petroleum Division meeting arranged by the Southern California Se
Jan 1, 1933
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Nickel-Bearing Alloys in the Production and Refining of Petroleum
By Byron B. Morton
NICKEL-BEARING alloys are associated with petroleum in the fields of exploration, production, and refining. In the first- named field the geologist of today makes use of such instruments as the seismo
Jan 1, 1935
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Mining Practice in Southeast Missouri
By L. W. Casteel, E. A. Jones
MINING the lead deposits of Southeast east Missouri has reached a high stage of technical development dictated by the scattered occurrences of low-grade ore through favorable horizons in the Bonne Ter
Jan 1, 1947