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Non-metallic Minerals - Washing and Sizing Sand and Gravel
By Edmund Shaw
In the year just past there were produced in the United States about 170,000,000 tons of sand and gravel. Much of this was pit-run material used for gravelling roads and as railroad ballast on lines t
Jan 1, 1926
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Production - Introduction
By James Terry Duce
The symposium on production for the year 1941 contains few papers on the foreign situation. Rigid censorship prevails in various countries, as the question of the volume of petroleum supplies has beco
Jan 1, 1942
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Endowment Funds (3e37e298-47d8-43af-9039-87051cd8a642)
The income of the Institute is derived mainly from dues, advertising in MINING AND METALLURGY and sale of publications. These sources are fortunately supplemented by the interest from invested funds n
Jan 1, 1937
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Iron and Steel Division - Results of Treating Iron with Sodium Sulfite to Remove Copper (TN)
By A. Simkovich, R. W. Lindsay
The possibility of using sodium sulfide slags to remove copper from ferrous alloys has been investigated by Jordan1 and by Langenberg.2, 3 In these studies, such slags were determined to be capable of
Jan 1, 1961
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Biographical Notices - Christopher Robert Corning
Christopher R. Corning was one of the ablest mining engineers and geologists in America and one whose name was well known also in Mexico, Cuba, South America and many European countries. He was educat
Jan 1, 1924
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PART VI - High-Speed Calorimetry During Freezing and Cooling of Metals
By George W. Healy, Ko Yamaguchi
In typical calorimetry the energy given off by a material under study is transferred to a water bath, whose temperature is sensed by a thermometer; for correct measurement the water bath must attain a
Jan 1, 1967
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Rescue Work at Argonaut Mine Fire of 1922
By Byron Pickard
AT MIDNIGHT of Sunday, Aug. 27, 1922, a fire was discovered in the main shaft of the Argonaut mine, Jackson, Cal. With the excep-tion of a shift boss and two skip tenders who escaped, the entire night
Jan 11, 1922
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Drilling and Production-Equipment, Methods and Materials - Corrosion Mitigation Within Dehydrating Tanks
By Ernest O. Kartinen
This report is the accumulation of eight years of experience on only one small phase in the business of oil production. It is not intended as a final report but rather as a progress report dealing wit
Jan 1, 1950
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Gypsum
By J. F. Havard
Gypsum is a useful industrial mineral found abundantly on the earth's crust. It is inexpensive to mine and process, and its calcined products have a wide range of readily controllable properties
Jan 1, 1960
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Chicago Paper - Removal of Sulfur from Illuminating Gas (with Discussion)
By W. A. Dunkley, W. W. Odell
The sulfur content of coal is perhaps more important in the manufacture of illuminating gas than in any other coal-using industry. Whether the gas is made by the distillation of coal in retorts or ove
Jan 1, 1920
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Properties Of Low-Carbon Medium-Chromium Steels Of The Air-Hardening Type
By E. C. Wright
THIS paper describes some properties of steels in the composition range 0.10 to 0.30 per cent carbon and 1 to 7 per cent chromium. It is well known that some steels of this type develop high tensile s
Jan 1, 1933
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Small Amounts of Alloying Elements on the Ductility of Cast Molybdenum
By G. W. P. Rengstorff, L. E. Olds
PREVIOUS research has shown that cast molyb-denum has good ductility at room temperature if the metal is sufficiently pure. In practice, however, it is very difficult to reduce the impurity content o
Jan 1, 1958
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LPF at Miami – Analysis of Latest Operations
By J. J. Bean
Concentrating mixed sulfide-oxide copper ores by the leach-precipitation-flotation method is an old operation at the Miami Copper Co. The idea was conceived and the method developed at Miami by F. W.
Jan 12, 1960
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Institute of Metals Division - Density Changes on Annealing Cold-Worked Molybdenum
By Harry W. Antes
The density changes that occurred on annealing cold-worked poly crystalline molybdenum, over the temperature range of 870" to 1630 SC, were determined. Increases in density were observed for recovery
Jan 1, 1964
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Cleaning - Heat Drying of Washed Coal (With Discussion)
By S. M. Parmley
Experience has shown that there are some factors connected with the drying of fine washed coal that are not present in drying of slack coal as normally practiced at cement kilns or pulverized coal pla
Jan 1, 1931
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Colorado And New Mexico - Colorado
Records of coal in Colorado begin only a few years before the Civil War. In 1859 Macomb reported beds of lignite on both sides of Galisteo Creek, and in the foothills of the Placer Mountains, a place
Jan 1, 1942
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Petroleum Resources Of Kansas
By Raymond Moore
THE oil-producing districts of Kansas comprise the northern portion of the so-called Mid-Continent field. As shown in the accompanying map, these districts are located chiefly in the southeastern and
Jan 2, 1920
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Institute of Metals Division - Sigma Phases with Aluminum
By K. P. Gupta
The Cb-rich boundary of the (Cb,Al) a phase field at 1250OC is near 41 pct Al. The Al atoms tend to occupy the C. N. 12 sites in this structure. A homologous (Ta,Al)a phase was identified. No a phase
Jan 1, 1962
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Tungsten, Molybdenum and Chromium - Hydrogen Content of Electrolytic Chromium and Its Removal (Metals Tech., Jan. 1948, TP
By E. V. Potter, H. C. Lukens
In general, during all electrowinning processes, large volumes of gas are liberated at the cathodes of the electrolytic cells. Most of this gas escapes from the electrolyte, but much of it may be abso
Jan 1, 1949
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The Law Of Crushing (113caf3d-2d91-4feb-a571-bb226dd543a8)
By John W. Bell
In the introduction to an excellent pamphlet, John Gross' makes the following statements: Although marked progress has been made along mechanical lines, the theory and conception of underlying p
Jan 1, 1942