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Papers - Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Columbia during 1940
By O. C. Wheeler
Production in Colombia attained a new high during 1940 when it reached a total of 25,607,976 bbl. Of this amount, the Tropical Oil Co. produced 21;426,492 bbl., including 268,586 bbl. of petroleum con
Jan 1, 1941
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Mining And Transportation Practice In Minnesota Iron Mines (ae216b6e-3bbf-438d-a0ec-773def7689ce)
By Grover J. Holt
A DETAILED description of the many variations in iron mining and transportation practice in Minnesota would require much space. Since a fairly detailed description of the practices then in use was pub
Jan 1, 1942
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A Convenient Mine Hoist Analysis
By A. W. Brune
Conventional methods of calculating the duty cycle of a mine hoist are awkward in that a number of items must be remembered or that they must be collected together in order to have all the calculated
Jan 9, 1961
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Reservoir Engineering-General - Two-Dimensional Analysis of a Radial Heat Wave
By C. Chu
An investigation has been made of the radial heat-wave process using a mathematical model in two-dimensional cylindrical coordinates. This model considers combustion, convection and conduction inside
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Meeting Of The Board Of Directors, Dec. 28, 1917
The petition for the formation of a Tulsa Section was granted. The final budget for the year 1917, and the tentative budget for the year 1918, were adopted. The Secretary was instructed to continue
Jan 2, 1918
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Potash Development in Southeastern New Mexico
By H. I. Smith
THE recently developed potash industry in southeastern New Mexico, though based on a relatively new discovery, marks the latest and perhaps culminating phase of the effort to obtain a domestic source
Jan 1, 1933
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Geological Interpretation Of Aerial Photographs
By J. J. Van Nouhuys
THE economics of aerial survey and the technical processes by the aid of which vertical and oblique aerial photographs are turned into line maps showing the most profuse topographical detail such as c
Jan 1, 1937
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Some Practical Hints In Bucket-Elevator Operation
By A. M. Nicholas
WHEN attempting to lift mill pulp containing a considerable percentage of wolframite, in an ordinary bucket elevator, difficulty was encountered from the tendency of the tungsten minerals to settle, o
Jan 2, 1918
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Principles of Flotation, VIII-An Experimental Study of the Adsorption of Aerofloat 25 at Mineral Surfaces, and Its Application to Differential Flotation
By Keith Sutherland
AEROFLOAT 25 is a complex mixture of free cresylic acid with aryl substituted dithiophosphoric acids, sulphides, disulphides, etc. Its complete composition has not been published by the makers or pate
Jan 1, 1939
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Lead - Treatment of Speisses and Drosses as Produced in Lead Smelting
By R. A. Perry
A speiss is an artificial arsenide, sometimes an antimonide, formed in lead smelting, smelting of oxide copper ores, and in some lead-refining operations. The production of speiss is closely allied wi
Jan 1, 1944
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Spokane Paper - Modern Progress in Mining and Metallurgy in the Western United States
By David W. Brunton
The list of our past-Presidents comprises the names of many who, in their official addresses, have sketched the current progress of the arts and professions with which they were familiar. Such address
Jan 1, 1910
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Institute of Metals Division - The Extrusion of Powdered Magnesium Alloys (Correction, p. 944)
By T. E. Leontis, R. S. Busk
WORK was initiated several years ago at The Dow Chemical Company to determine the applicability of powder metallurgy processes to magnesium and its alloys. Although it was found possible to apply the
Jan 1, 1951
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Papers - Classification - Classification of Coal from the Viewpoint of the Paleobotanist (With Discussion)
By R. Thiessen
The question whether the kind, rank and grade of coal is in any way determined by the kind or type of plant from which it originated has been a problem since coal was first studied. Some investigators
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - Classification - Classification of Coals from the Point of View of the Railroads (With Discussion)
By M. MacFarland, E. McAuliffe
Our North American railway system, including the lines serving the United States, Canada and Mexico, with a total operating mileage of 303,040, employing 71,818 locomotives, represents not only the gr
Jan 1, 1930
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Paper - Gravity Methods - Gravity Surveying in Great Britain
By H. Shaw
It is now generally recognized that the gravitational method of geophysical surveying is a valuable aid in elucidating the geological structure of the subsoil and enables the practical geologist to de
Jan 1, 1929
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Institute of Metals Division - The Oxidation of Hastelloy Alloy X
By S. T. Wlodek
The surface and subscale oxidation reactions were followed by means of continuous weight-gain and metallographic techniques over the range 1600" to 2200°F (871° to 1204 °C) for up to 400 hr. Full iden
Jan 1, 1964
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Colorado Paper - The Concentration of Ores in the Butte District, Montana (see Discussion 1108)
By Charles W. Goodale
The ores of the Butte district present a variety of combinations, and their treatment by concentration is an interesting study. They may be classified in general as follows: 1. Copper-silver ores,
Jan 1, 1897
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Variation of Internal Friction with Grain Size
By Clarence Zener
THEORETICAL considerations by one of the authors have led1 to the prediction that the dynamic internal friction of annealed metals has a broad maximum at a certain grain size. This prediction they hav
Jan 1, 1940
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Index (7f8cf828-665b-408d-8b3a-24e81b911f0d)
Jan 1, 1968