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Aerial Reconnaissance and Contour Mapping in Mining
By Leon Eliel
TEN years ago a broad knowledge of aerial mapping, coupled with a smattering of geology, qualified one to speak on the subject of the appli-cation of aerial mapping to geology. Today, with aerial maps
Jan 1, 1936
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Atlantic City Paper - A Decade in American Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 973)
By F. Louis Grammer
The iron industry has been so markedly the cynosure of all eyes, that a sense of weariness has overtaken many on-lookers, and a new wonder is desired. While the commercial phase of the iron industr
Jan 1, 1905
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Papers - Analysis of the Generation and Delivery of the Blast to the Metal in a Bessemer Converter (T.P. 1344, with discussion)
By J. S. Fulton
Those who live in steel-mill towns are so accustomed to the sight of flames spouting from the mouth of a Bessemer vessel that they seldom pause to think of the amazing process behind it. Actually cold
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Analysis of the Generation and Delivery of the Blast to the Metal in a Bessemer Converter (T.P. 1344, with discussion)
By J. S. Fulton
Those who live in steel-mill towns are so accustomed to the sight of flames spouting from the mouth of a Bessemer vessel that they seldom pause to think of the amazing process behind it. Actually cold
Jan 1, 1941
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Corundum-A Vital Wartime Abrasive
By Roland D. Parks
CORUNDUM, little publicized as an industrial abrasive, has, in its small way, contributed greatly to the production of many specialized items vital to our war program and to our allies. Optical elemen
Jan 1, 1945
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Asbestos-Fiber Exploration And Production Forecasts By Core Drilling, Jeffrey Mine, Asbestos, Quebec
By George K. Foster, Charles D. Borror
THE Jeffrey mine of the Canadian Johns-Manville Co., Limited, is in the town of Asbestos, situated approximately 100 miles northeast of Montreal and about the same distance southwest of Quebec, in Ric
Jan 1, 1946
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The Placer Law as Applied to Petroleum
By Max Ball
AN intelligent discussion of the oil situation and its needs, whether from the standpoint of the prospector, the operator, the engineer, or the public administrative officer, must be founded upon a kn
Jan 6, 1914
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Floating Limestone at Permanente
By John C. Kleiber, George M. Meisel
From time to time since the initial installation of an experimental flotation section in 1940, Permanente Cement Co. has made efforts to beneficiate the low-grade limestone fraction which occurs in it
Jan 3, 1964
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Geophysical Investigations Concerning the Seismic Resistance of Earth Dams
By C. A. Heiland
GEOPHYSICAL methods are playing an ever increasing part in various engineering fields. About ten years ago, geophysical exploration was first applied in civil engineering to the study of foundations a
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Reserves and Mining - Symposium on Grouting - Technique of Pressure Cementing in the Petroleum, Mining, and Construction Industries
By Wm. D. Owsley, R. E. Moeller
In the petroleum industry, the process known as oil well cementing is the equivalent of pressure grouting in the mining and construction industries. The science of oil well cementing has been known an
Jan 1, 1949
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Discussion
By W. A. Koehler, W. L. Eaton, Reynold Q. Shotts, M. E. Hinkle, M. R. Geer, Ralph M. Hunter, H. F. Yancey, Andrew B. Crichton, E. Zimmerman, S. H. Ash
R. Maize and H. P. Greenwald presiding) E. T. POWELL*-I would like to ask either Mr. Ash or Mr. Eaton if they know of any place where the Mine Inspectors' for¬mula has been used that water has
Jan 1, 1948
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Mercury Industry In Italy
By Edwin B. Eckel
THIS paper, based on brief field examination and on data supplied by the operators, records the condition of the Italian mercury industry as of March 1945, not long after Italy's collapse. Except
Jan 1, 1947
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Institute of Metals Division - Plastic Deformation Modes in Fe-Ni-C Martensites
By R. H. Richman
Coarse-grained Fe-Ni-C martensites formed at subzero temperatures were strained in compression at room temperature and the plastic deformation modes examined as a funclion of carbon content. At very l
Jan 1, 1963
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Thoughts On The Thermic Curves Of Blast Furnaces
By H. M. Howe
I WISH to present to you a few thoughts on some of the phenomena and laws of iron smelting. Owing to the great complexity of the subject, to the great variety of points to be taken into consideration,
Jan 1, 1877
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Secondary Recovery - A Laboratory Investigation of the Effect of Rate on Recovery of Oil by Water Flooding
By J. G. Richardson, F. M. Perkins
Results and procedures are pre-cented covering a laboratory investigation of the effect of rate of water advance on the displacement of oil from clean water-wet sands. The experiments included water f
Jan 1, 1958
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Economics of Domestic Marketing
By Sidney Swensrud
ABOUT a year ago, I attempted in a general way to trace the origin and development of some of the marketing problems of the petroleum industry, and to describe certain trends which it then seemed poss
Jan 1, 1932
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New Mining Devices - Some Gadgets and Innovations Developed and Used at the Climax Mine
By F. O. Garrabrant, F. S. McNicholas, Robert Henderson, R. U. King
Several years ago, it was decided to experiment with the use of high-pressure water to bring in finger hangups and reduce the amount of secondary blasting necessary. It was argued that the velocity ef
Jan 1, 1946
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Special Curricula Other Than Petroleum
IT does not seem practicable to review all the other specialized curricula that have developed in the mineral industries field in so much detail as has been given for petroleum. Nor is it easy to draw
Jan 1, 1941
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Institute of Metals Division - Observations of the Structure of Aluminum Specimens Grown from the Melt
By P. E. Doherty, R. S. Davis
Sub boundaries and micropores, as well as certain other imperfections, may be revealed in aluminum by the formation of pits on the surface during cooling from elevated temperatures. The pits are attri
Jan 1, 1962
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New York Paper - The Commercial Analysis of Furnace Gases
By T. Egleston
The importance of making analyses of gases in furnaces which are used for metallurgical purposes is every day growing more and more evident. It is the only method of understanding the reactions that t