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Equilibrium Relations in Aluminum-nickel Alloys of High Purity
By William Fink
NICKEL is used as an alloying element in several complex commercial aluminum alloys, among which are found some very interesting proper-ties, such as relatively high strength at elevated temperatures,
Jan 1, 1934
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Institute of Metals Division - Self and Interdiffusion in Liquid Zinc Amalgams
By R. E. Grace, H. W. Schadler
DARKEN1 has established the theoretical relation between the self-diffusion coefficients and the Boltzmann-MatanO Or interdiffusion coefficient: D is the Boltzmann-Matano or interdiffusion coe
Jan 1, 1960
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A Quantitative Experimental Investigation Of The Hydrogen And Nitrogen Contents Of Steel During Commercial Melting ? Introduction
By Clarence E. Sims
DURING the past several years the steel casting industry has made studies of heavy castings in which the test bar has been taken from heavy sections rather than from attached or separately cast coupon
Jan 1, 1947
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Manganese
By Charles H. Jacoby
In 1774 a Swedish chemist, C. W. Schule, first recognized manganese as an element. That same year Schule's associate, J. G. Gahn, isolated the element manganese for the first time. In 1856 the Be
Jan 1, 1975
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Papers - - Stabilization - Some Constitutional Aspects of the Oil Problem
By Henry M. Bates, Roscoe Pound
Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen: I accepted your Chairman's invitation to speak to a group of experts in this field with the greatest hesitation, because I know little or nothing about it. Certainly I
Jan 1, 1935
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Chicago Paper - Summary of American Improvements and Inventions in Ore-Crashing and Concentration, and in the Metallurgy of Copper, Lead, Gold, Silver, Nickel, Aluminum, Zinc, Mercury, Antimony and Tin (See Discussion, p. 647)
By James Douglas
American metallurgical inventions have not always been absolute metallurgical improvements, if accurate work be the standard of comparison; but when we review the new methods and machinery which have
Jan 1, 1894
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Oil-Shale Development - Oil-shale Resources of Colorado, Utah and Wyoming (TP 2358, Petr. Tech., May 1948)
By Carl Belser
This paper summarizes the data on the oil-shale deposits of western Colorado, Utah and Wyoming. It is based on published reports by the U. S. Geological Survey, on the results of core drilling and sam
Jan 1, 1949
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Overland Conveyor Hauls 40 Million Tons Of Coal 4 1/2 Miles
By R. F. Slack, J. C. Draper, J. A. Younkins
In 1959, the Duquesne Light Co. was faced with the problem of moving more than 40 million tons of bituminous coal in Greene County, Pa. The coal had to travel a distance of about 4 ½ miles from a new
Jan 11, 1966
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Mica (28ee116a-8aa3-4d28-9751-f6d0eeb35a0a)
By Eugene H. Dawson
MICA is a mineral that once was a familiar sight as fireproof windows in stove and furnace doors and as lamp chimneys and shades. Since 1878, the beginning of the electrical age, the use of mica for s
Jan 1, 1949
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Subcollegiate And Vocational Education
IT will be recalled that when educational instruction for the mineral industry began at Freiberg, at the beginning of the eighteenth century, the original aim was to organize and systematize the proce
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Mining - Earth Resistivity as Applied to Problems of Exploration in the Potash-bearing Region near Carlsbad, New Mexico (T. P. 1354)
By H. Cecil Spicer
The results described in this article are based On field work conducted during the periods April-May, I939, and May-July, 1940. The United States Potash Co. is mining potash on Government land under a
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - Theory and Interpretation - Applied Geology at the Magma Mine, Superior, Arizona (Mining Tech., Sept. 1947, T.P. 2214)
By Wilson D. Michell
The Magma copper vein trends east-west, dips 70" south, and cuts through a 6000-ft thickness of limestones, quartzites,. shale, diabase, and schist. The vein is itself a fault with a horizontal offset
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - Crushing and Grinding - Some Fine-grinding Fundamentals
By A. W. Farenwald
Fine grinding cannot be accomplished in machines in which the component parts move in definite and restricted paths with respect to each other. Such machines are crushers. A "grinding mill" may be def
Jan 1, 1935
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Easton Paper - The Ore Knob Copper Mine and some related Deposits
By T. Sterry Hunt
This remarkable mine, to which attention has lately been drawn, is situated not far from the New River, in Ashe County, North Carolina, on a spur of the Blue Ridge which lies between the main crest of
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Papers - Influence of Temperature on Elastic Limit of Single Crystals of Aluminum. Silver and Zinc (With Discussion)
By Richard F. Miller, W. E. Milligan
Work was undertaken two years ago at the Hammond Laboratory for the purpose of determining the magnitude of the elastic range in single crystals of pure metals by means of creep tests, the assumption
Jan 1, 1937
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Papers - Materials Used in Oil-refinery Pumps
By A. E. Harnsberger
I is obvious that details such as the physical and chemical properties and methods of heat-treating of the materials mentioned must be omitted in a paper on the subject of materials used in oil-refine
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - - Production - Domestic - Developments in the California Oil Industry during the Year 1933
By H. W. Miller, V. H. Wilhem
Although the year 1933 was a period of uncertainty, considerable new development was initiated, with a high percentage of favorable results, for owing to financial conditions only projects of merit we
Jan 1, 1934
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Production Engineering - Measurements of Original Pressure, Temperature and Gas-oil Ratio in Oil Sands (With Discussion)
By K. C. Sclater, B. R. Stephenson
Recent progress in oil-recovery methods has brought into prominence gas-energy relations in oil sands. The greater the effort made to utilize this gas-energy relationship to the best advantage in oil
Jan 1, 1929
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Production - Foreign - Petroleum in the Indian Empire
By Eric J. Bradshaw
For several hundred years the petroleum industry has flourished in Burma and at the close of the eighteenth century there were over five hundred producing wells in the Yenangyaung field. These were la
Jan 1, 1931
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Can Anthracite Mines Be Operated Profitably On More Than One Shift?
By Dever Ashmead
FROM time to time metal-mine engineers have inquired why anthracite mines and their preparators are rarely operated on the two or three-shift basis. The subject may be approached as affecting: labor,
Jan 2, 1922