Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Evaluation of Limestone Mining and Marketing Opportunities for Urban Quarries (6cc65a88-c9e2-40fc-a98a-34fc979e1be2)
By Marlin J. Veesaert
Urban quarries offer one of the greatest opportunities for profit in nonmetallic mining with limited financial risk-if properly evaluated, planned and developed to meet market needs. Location, with re
Jan 1, 1980
-
Montreal Meeting - September, 1879
Jan 1, 1880
-
65. Ore Deposits at Butte, Montana
By Gordon B. Brox, Joseph F. Mcaleer, Charles C. Goddard, Edward P. Shea, Robert G. Ingersoll, Lester G. Zeihen, George J. Burns, John M. Guilbert, Richard N. Miller, Charles Meyer
The Boulder batholith is a composite intrusive in which the Butte quartz monzonite is the dominant rock type. Quartz porphyry dikes intruded the quartz monzonite in directions which were subsequently
Jan 1, 1968
-
Non-ferrous Metallurgy and Metallography - The Waelz Process (with Discussion)
By R. Hoffmann
The Waelz process produces oxides of volatilizable metals from ores, metalliferous products and residues. The process was originally used for recovering zinc and lead, where tailings and residues cont
Jan 1, 1928
-
Arizona Paper - Mine Accounting for Small Mines
By James E. Chapman
The observations here presented are not those of an expert accountant, but of one who, while he has seen considerable service in the accounting departments of large companies, has spent more time in e
Jan 1, 1917
-
Effect of Phosphorus on the Endurance Limit of Low-Carbon Steels
By F. F. McINTOSH
STEEL is a general name applied to the alloys of iron and carbon. These alloys always contain , other elements such as manganese, silicon, sulfur, and phosphorus. Manganese and silicon are usually con
Jan 1, 1926
-
Abstract - Interpretation of the Literature on the Mechanism of the Hall Process
By John J. Stokes
Literature on the electrolysis of aluminum from cryolite melts and on the structure of these .melts is surveyed critically. Data on density, freezing point, and other properties are reviewed. Theories
Jan 1, 1959
-
Los Alamos - The Town of Beginning Again - A behind-the-scenes story of life in the community built around the hidden laboratory where the A-bomb was made, and where nuclear research now goes forward
By Marie Kinzel
LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, the birthplace f the atomic bomb, is one of the most famous-and mysterious-places in the world. It leaped into fame on Aug. 6, 1945, when the first atomic bomb burst over Hiros
Jan 1, 1946
-
Foreword by Raymond H. Feierabend
Jan 1, 1969
-
Lake Superior Paper - The Commercial Wet Lead-Assay (Discussion, p. 1010)
By H. A. Guess
For a number of years I have used for the commercial wet assay of lead generally the ammonium molydate, and occa-sionally the ferrocyanide method. These well-known methods need no detailed description
Jan 1, 1905
-
Part X - The Influence of Additive Elements on the Activity Coefficient of Sulfur in Liquid Lead at 600°C
By A. H. Larson, L. G. Twidwell
The influence which Au, Ag, Sb, Bi, Sn, and Cu have, both individually and collectively, on the activity coefficient of sulfur in liquid lead at 600"C zuas studied by circulating a H2S-Hz gas wlixture
Jan 1, 1967
-
Rare Metals and Minerals - Pure Electrolytic Manganese Produced; Vacuum Tubes Important Outlet For Some Metals
By Colin G. ink
OUTSTANDI'NG in progress among the less familiar 'metals during 1936 is the electrolytic production of 99.9 per cent manganese meta1 readily and many quantity. Strictly speaking, manganese s
Jan 1, 1937
-
The Minerals Depletion Allowance
By Dr. O’Neil Thomas J., Donald W. Gentry
It was a western truism that more money was made from selling mines than from buying them, just as it was accepted that many a good mine had been spoiled by working it. from R. E. White, "The Mining T
Jan 1, 1984
-
Editorial – No Secret About Safety
“IT is decreed by Divine Providence that those who know what they ought to do and then take care to do it properly, for the most part meet ' with good fortune in all. they, undertake; on the othe
Jan 1, 1952
-
Research, Patents, and the Kilgore Bill ? Private Initiative in Research, With Patent Protection, a Proved Success in America
By Anthony William Deller
MAJOR battles in the present war have been fought in American research laboratories. Without the outstanding contributions made by our scientists, engineers, and technologists in mining and metallurgy
Jan 1, 1945
-
Is One Principal Aim Better Than Manifold Interests
By Bradley Stoughton
PROMINENCE has been given lately in engineering circles to the question whether an organisation with manifold interests can be as effective as one with a single aim, especially if that single aim be t
Jan 1, 1920
-
What is Steel? (744f6776-40fb-4d5f-be13-3f15d583055d)
By A. L. Holley
THE general usage of engineers, manufacturers, and merchants, is gradually, but surely, fixing the answer to this question. In every country rails, boiler-plates, and machinery bars, whether hard or s
Jan 1, 1876
-
Institute of Metals Division - On the Origin of Tertiary Creep in an Aluminum Alloy
By F. N. Rhines, A. S. Nemy
The mode of high-temperature tertiary creep of 523-0 aluminum alloy was found to be strongly stress dependent. The occurrence of necking and/or fissures during tertiary creep exhibited a sequence with
Jan 1, 1960
-
Institute of Metals - Exudations on Copper Castings (with Discussion)
By W. H. Bassett, J. C. Bradley
Beads of metal frequently appear at the ends of cast-copper wire bars and on the sides of wedge cakes near the top. These are richer in cuprous-oxide than the rest of the casting. A micrographical stu
Jan 1, 1926
-
Oil Prices Satisfactory Though Economic Position Insecure
By H. D. Wilde
DURING 1934 conditions in the production division of the petroleum industry were reasonably satisfactory but nevertheless a decided feeling of insecurity existed largely because of the uncertainty of
Jan 1, 1935