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New York Paper - Blast-furnace Refractories (Appendix)
By Raymond M. Howe
Additional data have been secured on the disintegration of furnace linings and the spalling of stove brick. The first article on the disintegration of furnace linings appears to have been written b
Jan 1, 1920
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Latest Improvements in the Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company 's Grate-Kiln Operations to Give Improved Costs and Better Pellet Quality
By Paul E. Rosten
Introduction This papers describes some of the latest improvements that have been incorporated or planned by the Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. to reduce operating costs and improve pellet quality. The
Jan 1, 1981
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Mercury: Its Uses and Usefulness
By A. V. UDELL
OF all the metals that have from time to time been called the "Wonder Metal," mercury, often called quicksilver, is probably the most deserving of this designation. A wonder metal it must have been to
Jan 1, 1929
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Exploration Methods and Technique - An Overview
By The Staff of Dames & Moore
Five factors are required for the formation of uranium deposits: a source, transporting medium, host, trap, and preservation. Locating and evaluating uranium deposits requires ail integration of metho
Jan 10, 1978
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Correlation of Earth Resistivity with Geological Structure and Age
By R. H. Card
THE geophysicist is interested greatly in the resistivities of different formations or parts of the earth's crust; sometimes he is interested in a single figure in the nature of an average, or wh
Jan 1, 1937
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Russia's Mineral Potential
By Paul M. Tyler
MILITARY power stems from industrial power and industrial power in turn depends predominantly upon an ample and assured supply of mineral raw materials. It thus becomes the duty of mineral economists
Jan 6, 1951
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Fluorspar and Its Uses
By E. L. BROKENSHIRE
FLUORSPAR, a little known non-metallic mineral, referred to technically as fluorite, chemically as calcium fluoride, is a compound of calcium and fluorine in the ratio of one molecule of calcium to tw
Jan 1, 1929
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World Phosphate Rock Outlook Through The Late 1970's (dbc8e69e-67e8-47ed-b3b9-2ad1928aa401)
By M. C. Manderson
The sharp drop in world phosphate demand that took place in 1975 due to temporarily high prices, now seems to be reversing itself. And prices for both phosphate rock and phosphate fertilizers, which d
Jan 1, 1979
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Present Conditions In The California Oil-Fields
By Mark L. Requa
(San Francisco fleeting, October, 1911.) DURING the past two years California has developed a new and important oil-field : I refer to Midway. This field produced the famous Lake View gusher, which i
Apr 1, 1912
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Technical Notes - Function of Tuna Oil Fatty Acids as Collectors in the Flotation of Iron Ore
By S. R. B. Cooke, C. E. Thurston, G. Kudo
The trend toward utilization of low grade iron ores means that more efficient methods must be developed for their concentration. The collecting ability of fatty acids derived from fish oils has been e
Jan 1, 1962
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Problems of Nonferrous Metallurgists Discussed
By AIME AIME
ABOUT 55 attended the general session of the Nonferrous Metallurgy Committee on Wednesday afternoon. In opening the proceedings the Chairman, Frank G. Breyer, served notice of his intention to make an
Jan 1, 1933
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Borax-Deposits of the United States
By Charles R. Keyes
A COMPLETE transformation has taken place in the boras industry during the year 1908. A most remarkable factor in this radical change in method of producing the crude borates has been its removal from
Oct 1, 1909
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Exhaust Dust Control in Dry Percussion Drilling
The paper relates to the laboratory and pilot plant studies that have been carried out by Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd., Metallurgical Research Div., in developing the ammonia pressure leach process for
Jan 3, 1955
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Cleveland Paper - The Wood Flotation Process
By Henry E. Wood
In my opinion, the concentration of minerals by flotation is the most interesting problem in ore-dressing, and will command eventually far more consideration than it has at present. For many ores it f
Jan 1, 1913
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The Leaching Process at Chuquicamata, Chile
By Charles Eichrodt
THE ore that is being treated by the present plant lies between the leached zone, or capping, and the mixed sulfide and oxide zone. The principal copper minerals are chalcanthite (CuSO4.5H20), brochan
Jan 1, 1930
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Minerals Beneficiation - Relative Reduction Rates of Porous Iron Oxide Pellets
By W. J. Helfrich, C. L. Sollenberger
Many present direct reduction processes utilize iron ore concentrates for the production of sponge iron and the sponge iron is usually preferred as an agglomerate. Pelletizing a high grade iron oxide
Jan 1, 1961
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Glen Summit Paper - Apparatus for the Manipulation of Iron and Steel Plates During the Process of Finishing
By Gram Curtis
The apparatus described below for the handling of plates upon their delivery from the rolls, embodies features believed to be of interest to those contemplating the building of new plate-mills, and al
Jan 1, 1892
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Notes on the Siemens Direct Process
By A. L. Holley
THERE is a growing demand for pure and cheap material for fine open-hearth steel ; a material not only very free from phosphorus, but from carbon and silicon; so that it may he rapidly converted into
Jan 1, 1880
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The Acid Bessemer Process of 1940
By H. W. Graham
THE young metallurgist of today who thinks casually of the technical literature of the steel industry might conclude that little has been published concerning the Bessemer process. This conclusion is
Jan 1, 1940
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An Explanation of the Flotation Process
By Arthur Taggart
INTRODUCTION THE flotation process for the concentration of ores is a method by means of which one or more of the minerals in the ore (usually the valuable ones) are picked up by means of a liquid fi
Jan 8, 1916