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Foreword (1789554f-ef4c-443c-9ee4-65e87d720db1)
By Advisory Editorial Board
FOR many years there has been no book that adequately represented the present state of the art of coal preparation-an art that has been rapidly changing during the passing years, and particularly duri
Jan 1, 1943
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Photograph of Leo F. Reinartz, Howe Lecturer
Jan 1, 1943
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Blast Furnace and Raw Materials - Pyrometry at the Coke Oven (Metals Technology, December 1942)
By Robert B. Sosman
The relative temperature distribution within a coke oven and among the ovens in a battery can be obtained automatically for the operator's guidance by sighting a total-radiation pyrometer on the
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Description of Mills - Ohio Copper Company Tailings Re-treatment Plant (Mining Technology, July 1940)
By Robert Goodwin, Frank R. Milliken
In September 1937, the Ohio Copper Co. inaugurated the treatment of its copper-bearing mill tailings at Lark, Utah. These tailings had been accumulated during the regular operation of the Ohio Copper
Jan 1, 1943
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Froth Flotation of Coal (dbaea9ab-2f11-4b2b-9dcf-2741854366cc)
By Clare B. Carlson, C. P. Proctor
THE history of the froth flotation of coal is relatively short. The flotation process was applied to fine-coal cleaning about the time of the end of World War I. Coal flotation finds more widespread u
Jan 1, 1943
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Certain Ore Shoots On Warped Fault Planes
By W. H. Emmons
MANY mineral veins occupy faults, and movements on certain warped fault planes have resulted in openings. On normal faults the [ ] steeper parts have the widest openings, and on reverse faults the
Jan 1, 1943
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Secondary Magnesium
By Charles E. Nelson
In considering the types of scrap that are processed into secondary magnesium, it is important to point out that the greatest proportion of this material is fabrication, foundry and machine shop scrap
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Concentration - The Mechanism of Jigging (Mining Technology, March 1943) (with discussion)
By Arthur Taggart
Recent jig practice has shown such marked departures from the pronouncements of the textbooks, particularly as to particle size recovered and size range of feed, as to make it desirable to reexamine t
Jan 1, 1943
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Constiution and Thermal Treatment - A Micrographic Study of the Cleavage of Hydrogenized Ferrite (Metals Technology, February 1943) (with discussion)
By Carl A. Zapffe, George A. Moore
In a previous publication from this laboratory1 the conclusion was drawn that the embrittling effect of occluded hydrogen on iron and steel must result from the precipitation of the gas within small o
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Concentration - Experiments with Slime-coatings in Flotation (Mining Technology, Nov. 1941)
By S. G. Bankoff
Ince1 proposed that electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged particles was responsible for slime-coating. Del Giudice2 postulated the metathetic formation of a cementing compound. Wark3 sug
Jan 1, 1943
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Preparation at the Face (acf647bf-b5fb-49e2-950a-42037f02c832)
By M. H. Forester, John D. Cooner
ALTHOUGH the unmined anthracite will last for approximately A 150 years, most of the thicker and cleaner coal beds have been almost entirely first-mined and pretty well robbed, leaving much of the pre
Jan 1, 1943
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The Influence Of Various Elements Upon The Position Of The Eutectoid In The Iron-Carbon (Carbide) System
By Jerome Strauss, Carl L. Shapiro
THIS is a critical examination of the theory that the amount of carbon necessary to form the iron-carbon (carbide) eutectoid is lowered by the addition of any carbide-forming element. Although this th
Jan 1, 1943
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Blast Furnace and Raw Materials - The Electrical Conductivity of Molten Blast-furnace Slags (Metals Technology, August 1943) (with discussion)
By A. E. Martin, Gerhard Derge
IE the molecular constitution of molten slags were better known, the nature of chemical reactions in slags and between slags and metals could be better understood and as a consequence might be better
Jan 1, 1943
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An Investigation Of The Technical Cohesive Strength Of Metals
By D. J. McAdam, R. W. Mebs
THE technical cohesive strength of a metal means, not the interatomic forces, but the technically estimated resistance to fracture. An example of such resistance to fracture is the so-called "true" br
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Concentration - Magnetic Separation of Sulphide Minerals
By H. Rush Spedden, A. M. Gaudin
Although the number of minerals that are ferromagnetic‡ or highly paramagnetic is strictly limited, it has been known for some time that many minerals have slight but supposedly characteristic magneti
Jan 1, 1943
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Hand Picking
By D. H. Davis
HAND picking was the earliest form of coal preparation, first practiced to improve the outward appearance of the coal being loaded and to remove any pieces that might appear objection- able to the buy
Jan 1, 1943
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in South Texas during 1942
By James J. Halbouty
The restraining effects of war conditions on oil-field development are well illustrated by statistics on South Texas † fields for the year 1942. Statistics also show a decline in wildcatting, but this
Jan 1, 1943
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Launder Washers
By C. P. Proctor, J. T. Crawford
TROUGH washers were among the earliest methods used for concentrating ores; they are referred to by Agricola about the middle of the sixteenth century as already being used while the hand- operated ji
Jan 1, 1943