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The Magnetic Susceptibility Of Rutile And Sphene
By S. C. Sun
Very little information is available concerning the magnetic properties of minerals and only recently has there been any attempt to correlate magnetic susceptibility with varying chemical composition1
Jan 1, 1959
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Preregistration Counseling For Mineral Industries Students At Penn State
By John J. Schanz
The ideal entering freshman for the College of Mineral Industries possesses the necessary aptitude to complete successfully a difficult technical curriculum, has a highly developed intellectual curios
Jan 1, 1959
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Underground Storage for Hydrocarbon Fluids
By R. L. Loofbourow
SEVERAL categories of storage are used depending on capacity. Operational storage, which is small in comparison with the market, facilitates handling surges of a few hours' or a few days' du
Jan 1, 1959
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Recovery Of Phosphates By In Situ Fluid Mining
By Sylvain J. Pirson
A fluid mining process has been developed by the writer whereby phosphate deposits are leached in place through the injection of a weak and recoverable acid solution much in the same manner as in the
Jan 1, 1959
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Hutchinson Mine - A Problem In Coal Mine-Drainage
By Ernst P. Hall
The Irwin Basin. (Fig. 1)* is a synclinal or shoe-horn *Figure numbers throughout refer to color slides not included with the preprint shaped basin in the Pittsburgh Coal Seam, It is approximately 10
Jan 1, 1959
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The Gyratory Ball Mill Its Principle Of Operation And Performance ? Introductory
By A. W. Fahrenwald
The gyratory mill shown in Figures I and II is a ball mill in every sense of the term, in that the grinding media are balls. The media container, called the shell, is of the form of a shallow cylindri
Jan 1, 1959
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Hydraulic Mining Of Gilsonite And Its Application To Coal Extraction
By J. M. Baker
It seems appropriate here to open with a quotation from the great pre-Confucian philosopher Lao-tze: "The softest thing in the world dashes against and overcomes the hardest. There is nothing in the
Jan 1, 1959
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Special Railroad Rates For The Movement Of Coal In Volume Quantities
By C. P. Blair
In discussing so-called "volume rates" for the movement of coal, I start from one basic premise: That it is the job of the railroads to devise rates which will move the traffic, while at the same time
Jan 1, 1959
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Modern Classification Methods Applied To Fine Aggregates
By C. E. Golson
Modern concrete technology emphasizes the basic qualities required of an acceptable aggregate: it must be clean, sound, homogeneous, and of a size gradation resulting in a concrete of the desired phys
Jan 1, 1959
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Thorite And Rare Earths Deposits In The Lemhi Pass Area Lemhi County, Idaho
By Alfred L. Anderson
Thorite and rare earth deposits in the Lemhi Pass area of southeastern Lemhi County, Idaho, are contained along complex shear and fracture zones and in reopened gold-quartz veins and copper lodes in q
Jan 1, 1959
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Mining Problems And Developments At Ambrosia Lake, New Mexico - Introduction
By Donald T. Delicate
Since the discovery of uranium in the Ambrosia Lake Area in 1955, a new mining district has developed which promises to be the greatest uranium producing area in the United States. Exploration and dev
Jan 1, 1959
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Preparation Of Coal For Utility Use
By Myron W. Mellor
Much has been published concerning the subject of coal preparation as related to electric power generation however it is always a most vital topic for both utilities and coal producers, It also consti
Jan 1, 1959
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Ammonium Nitrate Blasting Tests In Potash Mining
By Adolph V. Mitterer
International Minerals and Chemical Corporation operates one of six potash mines in the Carlsbad potash basin. More than 90 percent of America's potash is produced at Carlsbad and IMC accounts fo
Jan 1, 1959
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Control -- The Key To Preparation For The Export Market
By Martial P. Corriveau
The preparation of coal is essentially the same for export as it is for the domestic market. The big difference, I would say, is that, while coal for certain domestic uses (utilities, for instance) ne
Jan 1, 1959
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Limestone Mines - Their Potential Commercially And Strategically
By Russell W. Hunt
The cave man of ages past took his wife-and family from the cave pointing to a fire he had built and beating on his breast said, "Look what I have done". Today man is taking his family back to a cave
Jan 1, 1959
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Removal Of Sulfur Dioxide From Flue Gases At Elevated Temperature ? Summary
By J. H. Field
The sulfur dioxide emitted in low concentrations in flue gases from the combustion of sulfur-containing coals and fuel oils is a significant factor in contamination of the atmosphere with sulfur dioxi
Jan 1, 1959
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Curtain Walls Of Indiana Limestone - Introduction
By Jasper D. Ward
The Indiana Limestone Company has developed an insulated, thin and comparatively light-weight pane 1 suitable for use as a spandrel panel in a curtain wall. The panel is about four inches thick and is
Jan 1, 1959
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The R-N Rotary Kiln Process For Reduction Of Iron Ores ? Acknowledgement
By Olav Moklebust
The R-N Process is an outgrowth of the development by the National Lead Company's Norwegian subsidiary Titania A/S, of a process for producing metallic iron and a high titanium content co-product
Jan 1, 1959
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Water Clarification System At Wharton No. 2 Preparation Plant
By Robert L. Llewellyn
The Wharton No. 2 Mine of Eastern Gas and Fuel Associates is located about 60 miles south of Charleston, West Virginia in Boone County. Daily production is 6,000 T.P.D. on a two-shift basis. The Herns
Jan 1, 1959
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The Grand Isle Mine Freeport Sulphur Company's Offshore Venture ? Introduction
By C. O. Lee
The Grand Isle Sulphur Mine is located in the Gulf of Mexico, approximately seven miles off the coast of Grand Isle, Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. The depth of water at this location is about 50 feet.
Jan 1, 1959