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Telfer - Australia's Newest Gold Mill (c27decb7-bf16-4dac-a144-a7851a8a1e95)
By C. Chamberlain
The Telfer Project, Australia's newest, largest, and most remote gold mine treats 480 kt of ore grading 9.33 g/t derived from open pit mining operations. Coarse gold is recovered by gravity c
Jan 1, 1983
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Minerals Beneficiation - Two Years' Milling at Bicroft Uranium Mines Ltd
By I. C. Edwards, W. J. Dengler, D. F. Lillie
By 1959 the milling plant of Bicr oft Uranium Mines Ltd. had been in operation for two years. During this time many changes, both physical and chemical, had been made in an effort to improve plant eff
Jan 1, 1961
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Recent Progress in the Nonmetallics
By Oliver Bowles
STRIKING new developments in the field of industrial minerals include the employment of lime, salt, coal, and air for the manufacture of stockings, and the substitution of paper for granite and marble
Jan 1, 1940
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Smelting and Labor at a Mexican Copper Mine
By LEONARD S. AUSTIN
THE works of The Boleo Mining Co. are situated at Santa Rosalia, Lower California, on the opposite side of the Gulf of California from Guaymas, the, nearest railroad town. The copper deposits were dis
Jan 1, 1929
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Labor-Saving Appliances in the Works-Laboratory
By Edward Keller
THE present ruling principle in shop and factory, induced by conditions of. keen competition, is to do the greatest amount of work in the shortest time, or in other words, to secure the greatest outpu
Mar 1, 1905
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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
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Last Week in June-The Time to Visit the Chicago Fair
By AIME AIME
ALL technical men who are planning to visit the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago this summer-and all reports indicate that it will be worth visiting-should try to be there during Engineers&ap
Jan 1, 1933
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News From Members In Service (2b86db4f-f0e4-462d-ba84-9ab8fe536de9)
Thomas H. Beddall, so we are informed by Major J. B. Carlock, has been promoted and is now Adjutant of the 1st Battalion, 1st Gas Regi¬ ment. He was awarded, last summer, the Croix de Guerre. R. A.
Jan 12, 1918
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Rock Mechanics - Glass Insert Stressmeters
By K. Barron
The glass insert stressmeter, or photoelastic stressmeter, is an instrument designed to determine stress changes occurring in rocks. It has several potential advantages over other such devices in that
Jan 1, 1965
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Institute of Metals Has Full Two-Day Program
By TRUMAN S. FULLER
THE GREAT INTEREST in decomposition and trans- formation, so evident in the study of alloys during the last two years, was reflected in the many papers on this subject, presented at the first session
Jan 1, 1933
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Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Superimposed Static Tension on the Fatigue Process in Copper Subjected to Alternating Torsion
By W. A. Wood, H. M. Bendler
Cylindrical fatigue specimens of OFHC* copper were subjected to alternating torsion while under axial tension. The superimposed tension strongly influenced the fatigue life of the specimens as wel
Jan 1, 1962
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Alaskan Platinum Development at Goodnews Bay Makes U. S. Platinum Production Important
By Winston W. Spencer
ALTHOUGH by far the largest A consumer of platinum metals in the world, the United States until recently has been in- significant as a producer. Writing in the "Minerals Yearbook" for 1939, H. W. Davi
Jan 1, 1940
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Conservation of Natural Resources
By James Douglas
IN discussing the waste upon which hinges, or is supposed to hinge, so largely the preservation of our national resources, the conclusions reached would be more reliable if actual ex¬perience were con
May 1, 1909
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Drilling – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Effect of Pressure on Rock Drillability
By John R. Eckel
A Iaboratory drilling rig has been devised and placed in operation which permits the application of hydrostatic, terrastatic, and formation pore pressures to a rock sample for drilling under controlle
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Reservoir Engineering – General - Limitations on Pressure Predictions for Water-Drive Reservoirs
By L. H. Simons, H. H. Spain
I NT RODUCTION Theory indicates that linear water-floods should exhibit scaling and stabilization properties in both oil-wet and water-wet porous media'. Experimental verification of these pro
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Functions and Advantages of a Company Technical Library
By G. F. Olsen
ON superficial consideration a technical library might be considered a luxury to the business institution that possesses one. After all, public libraries and research institutions probably contain all
Jan 1, 1940
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Industrial Minerals In 1966
By Gill Montgomery
At this moment in the history of the world, the all- pervading and universally most important fact is that the world population is beginning to outgrow its food supply, and the United States has sudde
Jan 2, 1967
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Minerals Beneficiation - Analysis of the Wash Thickener-Two Stage Filtration Circuit
By R. S. Olson
An analysis of the wash thickener-two stage filtration circuit was undertaken to quantitatively describe the circuit performance. On the basis of information developed in this study, the factors of ma
Jan 1, 1963
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Postwar Horizons for Aluminum - New Lightweight High-Strength Alloys and Alclad Sheets Likely to Widen Market Outlets Greatly
By F. Keller
SOME PHRASEMAKER has aptly said that nature made aluminum light but research made it strong. Research has been a vital element in the past progress of the aluminum industry and its future growth likew
Jan 1, 1946