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  • SME
    Hypothesis for the Effect of Temperature on Coal Flotation

    By Shiou-Chuan Sun

    The froth flotation of coal, differing greatly from that of most minerals1-5, is not improved but rather impaired by temperatures higher than room temperature6-10 This phenomenon has long taunted us f

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Recent Advances In Drillability

    By James Paone

    Drillability of rocks by mechanical means is closely related to the physical properties of the respective rocks, Various approaches by previous investigators on rock drillability are presented, as wel

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Water, Clay And Rock Soundness

    By James R. Dunn

    The nature of water and clay in carbonate rocks is currently being investigated at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute by various thermal and sorption techniques. Two basic concepts 'led to the pre

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    New York Cement Producers Adjust To Geologic Complexities

    By Severn P. Brown

    Cement plants in the central Hudson River valley utilize limestones of the Helder-bergian Series of the Lower Devonian. Chiefly calcilutites, calcarenites, and cherty calcisiltites, these rocks repres

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    The Effect Of Antitrust Laws On The Collective Bargaining Process

    By Paul C. Lingo

    Two recent antitrust cases, coming from widely separated areas, different industries and involving wholly different facts were decided by the Supreme Court on June 7, 1965. The decisions in there two

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    The Effect Of Subsidence On Pipelines

    By James G. Tilton

    Subsidence resulting from mining operations, has been the object of sporadic study for many years. Reports have shown that subsidence has ranged from minor settlement detected only by precise measurem

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Layered Deposits - Syngenetic And Epigenetic.

    By George W. Bain

    Deposits of metals in only slightly disturbed strata have been attributed to sedimentation processes contemporary with deposition of the strata. Recently this origin has been extended' to a great

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Sedimentology Of The Salem Limestone In Indiana

    By Ned M. Smith

    The Mississippian Salem Limestone, from which dimension stone is quarried in Indiana, is principally a calcarenitic rock formed of fossil bryozoans, echinoderms, and specimens of Endothyra. Numerica

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Petrographic Analysis Of Northern Indiana Carbonate Aggregates

    By N. B. Aughenbaugh

    A study was made to determine those petrographic parameters that are correlative with carbonate-aggregate quality as indicated by the Los Angeles abrasion and absorption tests. Samples collected at 28

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    High Intensity, Wet Magnetic Separators ? I. Introduction

    By J. A. Bartnik

    In recent years, the need has become more and more accute for a high capacity, high intensity, wet magnetic separator for the concentration of finely ground, paramagnetic minerals. As a result of this

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Map Series No. 15 May, 1965 - Sulfate Concentration In Water From The Upper Part Of The Floridan Aquifer In Florida

    By William J. Shampine

    The Floridan aquifer, which underlies all of Florida, yields water with a sulfate content of less than 50 parts per million in the north-western part and throughout most of the center of the State. In

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Limestone Deposits Vs. Beneficiation

    By John A. Ames

    Limestone for portland cement must be beneficiated to produce uniform raw material for the kiln. Careful quarrying and selective recovery are factors in this process, but the chief aspects of benefici

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Acoustic Drying Of Coal ? Introduction

    By H. V. Fairbanks

    It is estimated that millions of tons of coal fines are unsaleable each year due to difficulty of drying them economically with conventional mechanical dewatering and thermal drying equipment. The dif

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Hydraulic Transportation Of Phosphate Ore

    By J. H. Elledge

    Hydraulic Transportation of Phosphate Ore from, a 40,000 Cubic Yard per Day Strip Mine IMC is transporting 1500 yards per hour of phosphate ore in a water slurry a distance of approximately five mi

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Flotation Characteristics Of Certain Manganese Oxides

    By M. C. Fuerstenau

    Flotation data indicate that sulfonate and dodecylamine adsorb physically on Mn02 at ambient temperature. Oleate also adsorbs physically if the zero-point-of-charge of the Mn02 is sufficiently high. C

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Some Implications Of Statistical Transport Theory In Rock Mechanics

    By Adrian E. Scheidegger

    Recently, a new theory of the subsidence of rock masses has been advanced by Litwiniszyn and coworkers, which is based on the notion that the individual rock particles perform random walks. It is show

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    "How To Remove Tramp Iron From Burden Carried On Conveyor Belt? Introduction

    By R. F. Merwin

    Advancement in automation intensifies the need to remove tramp iron from bulk materials being processed and carried on belt conveyors. Although magnets have long been employed for this purpose, it bec

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Selective Flotation Of Mica From Pegmatites ? Introduction

    By James S. Browning

    The principal uses of fine ground mica are as filler in wallboard joint cement, as a filler and surface coating for roofing, as an ingredient in paints, and in oil well drilling mud. The mineral has o

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    The Economic Evaluation Of Land Pebble Phosphate Deposits - Background

    By W. M. Houston

    The phosphate formations of the Pliocene epoch were deposited along the coastal shelf of the eastern seaboard. The deposition of the phosphate is thought to be somewhat contiguous along the early shor

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Fertilizer For Food Production

    By P. O. Ripley

    Into this tumultuous twentieth century, every second, two new babies are born. This is 5,412 per hour, and 130,000 per day. Relentlessly, consistently, alarmingly, they add to the more than three bill

    Jan 1, 1966