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Diffusion In Alclad 24S-T Sheet
By F. Keller, R. H. Brown
BECAUSE of the extensive use of Alclad 24s alloy sheet in aircraft construction, there is much interest in the metallurgical changes caused by heat-treatment of this product.1,2 One of these changes i
Jan 1, 1944
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Austenite Grain Size In Cast Steels
By Malcolm F. Hawkes
AUSTENITE grain size has long been recognized by metallurgists as an important property of steels because of its influence on toughness, hardenability, machinability and creep strength. Much research
Jan 1, 1947
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Chicago Paper - Sulfur in Producer Gas
By Frederick Crabtree, A. R. Powell
When Professor Stoek asked for a paper on the above subject, it was too late to prepare by June 1, or near that time, one that would invoive any appreciable amount of experimental work or original res
Jan 1, 1920
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Predicting Size Distribution in Classifier Products
By E. J. Roberts, E. B. Fitch
Most classifiers in use today are, in function, settling pools. A fluid suspension of particles is passed through a pool at such a rate that only a fraction of the particles-the coarser fraction-has t
Nov 1, 1956
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Uranium Deposits in the Black Hills
By John W. King
Uranium ore was first discovered in the Edgemont district of the southern Black Hills in the summer of 1951. The discovery was not made known for some time, but after the news leaked out prospecting b
Jan 1, 1956
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Carbon Dioxide Accumulations In Geologic Structures
By J. Charles Miller
NATURAL carbon dioxide has recently been exploited in the United States in consequence of oil and gas developments in the Western States and the growing demand by transcontinental and transoceanic shi
Jan 1, 1937
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Salt In The Metallurgy Of Lead
By Oliver Halston
THIS paper reports the results of the use of salt in some research work carried on during the past 3 years at the Salt Lake City Station of the Bureau of Mines, which is quartered in the University of
Jan 8, 1917
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Lead Mining In The Mississippi Valley
The Mississippi river was discovered by French explorers that came southwestward, by way of the Great Lakes, from eastern Canada. Vignan, Joliet, De Champlain, and others of the French pioneers in the
Jan 1, 1932
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Solubility of Oxygen in Solid Copper
By F. N. Rhines
DESPITE the large amount of study which has been devoted to the subject our present knowledge of the copper-oxygen system remains incomplete and unsatisfactory in many respects. This applies particu-l
Jan 1, 1934
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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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Solubility Of Carbon In Molten Copper
By Carl F. Floe, Michael B. Bever
THE possibility that carbon may be soluble in copper to a limited extent has been recognized for over a century. The quantitative investigation of this problem, however, requires more sensitive techni
Jan 1, 1945
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Twin Relationships In Annealed Copper Strip
By C. S. Barrett, P. Coheur
ANNEALING twins are common in the microstructure of copper that has been rolled and recrystallized. In such samples it follows that a twin relationship should exist between components of the recrystal
Jan 1, 1946
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Prospecting For Fire Clay In Missouri
By B. K. Miller, George E. Moore
THE Missouri fire clays are here divided into plastic and semiplastic clays occurring as widespread bedded deposits in east central Missouri and flint and diaspore clays occurring as isolated "sink-ho
Jan 1, 1947
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Safety Issues In The Mineral Industry
By Harry Perry
In the United States the state mining laws enacted in the late 1800s were the first laws to recognize that an employer had a responsibility to provide the employee a place to work that met at least so
Jan 1, 1976
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Mining - Stripping in the Anthracite Region
By H. H. Otto
Fourteen years ago, J. B. Warriner presented before the Institute a paper on anthracite stripping,' describing the progress of stripping in the Anthracite Region from its beginning with an old qu
Jan 1, 1931
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Dust-Ventilation Studies In Metal Mines
By D. Harrington
ONE of the main functions of the United States Bureau of Mines is to obtain and disseminate information that will promote safety in and around mines, and the health and safety of employees engaged in
Jan 2, 1921
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Petroleum Production In Mexico during 1945
By J. M. GARZA
The production of oil in Mexico during 1945 was 43,402,852 bbl., or a daily average of 118,912 bbl. In March 1938 most of the oil properties were taken over by the Mexican Government and since then ha
Jan 1, 1946
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Barite Mineralization In Southwestern Sardinia, Italy
By K. D. Snyder
Barite deposits occur in the Iglesiente-Sulcis district of southwestern Sardinia, an historically important lead-silver-zinc district. Barite, often genetically associated with the base metal deposits
Jan 1, 1985
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Increasing Interest Shown In Rock Mechanics
By N. E. Grosvenor
The study of rock mechanics is becoming more important each year and several groups are currently engaged in the study of rock mechanics instrumentation and techniques that can be used to determine ro
Jan 2, 1968
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Phosphate in the Kola Peninsula, USSR
By H. M. Woodrooffe
Three of the world's largest phosphate deposits are located in the USSR. These have an estimated reserve of 2,600 million short tons of elemental phosphorus. The best known lies in the Khibiny Ma
Jan 12, 1972