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Postwar Education for Mining Engineers - Basic Engineering Training Needed to Meet Problems of Management
By Myron Read
DURING the past 25 years, mining engineers have seen the development of a multitude of specialized engineering curricula in the mineral industry field. Bachelor degrees are now !ranted in the fields o
Jan 1, 1946
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Institute of Metals Division - Solution Rate of Solid Aluminum in Molten AL-Si Alloy
By E. W. Cawthorne, R. I. Jaffee, C. M. Craighead
SOLUTION of a solid metal or alloy in a molten metal bath is used daily in melting operations, extractive metallurgical processes, and in brazing. It is generally recognized that temperature, time, ag
Jan 1, 1956
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Ore Testing and Its Relation to Mill Results
By LIONEL E. BOOTH
ORE tests are made for the purpose of determining the correct methods of treatment for any particular ore. They should be conducted so as to insure that the results obtained in actual mill practice, o
Jan 1, 1924
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The Metallurgical Factors Affecting The Production Of Seamless Pipe
By J. W. Schroeder
SEAMLESS pipe, the product produced from piercing a solid round billet of steel by the Mannesmann process, was first produced in the latter half of the 19th century, the Mannesmann machine having been
Jan 1, 1951
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Colorado Paper - Manufacture of Ferro-alloys in the Electric Furnace (with Discussion)
By R. M. Keeney
Before the outbreak of the war in 1914, the only electric-furnace smelting plant operating on a commercial basis west of the Mississippi River was an electric pig-iron plant in California; rare metal
Jan 1, 1920
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A Gas Outburst in the Thick-Vein Freeport Coal Seam
By C. W. Pollock
THAT a distressing explosion of some magnitude did not take place in the Berry No. 3 mine of the Ford Collieries Co. recently was solely because no source of ignition was present when the stage was se
Jan 1, 1935
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Physical Metallurgy: What It Is and How It Progresses
By Oscar E. Harder
THE TERM "physical metallurgy' is used in the title of this lecture in preference to "metallography ?because the former has a broader meaning with most audiences, some people thinking of the latt
Jan 1, 1940
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Mechanical Borer Opens Two Record-Diameter Shafts at Monterey Coal
Two 6.17-m-diam (20.25-ft) shafts, said to be the largest ever opened with mechanical raise boring techniques, were completed in May and June 1978, at Monterey Coal Co.'s No. 1 mine near Carlinvi
Jan 12, 1978
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Aluminum ? How to Utilize Surplus Capacity Is Postwar Problem
By R. L. Sebastian
ALUMINUM'S war history is the record of a successful race to expand facilities fast enough to meet the multiple increases in military requirements, principally for aircraft. From the beginning of
Jan 1, 1946
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Plans for Petroleum Division in 1934
The plans for the activities of the Petroleum Division for the coming year do not differ materially from those of the past several years. The fall meeting is scheduled for Oct. 12 and 13 and is to be
Jan 1, 1934
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Mining and Metallurgy - 1948 - Mineral Dressing
By J. F. Myers
A bit of old philosophy: The optimist, the pessimist, The difference is droll; The optimist, the doughnut sees, The pessimist, the hole. This is a neat summation of the viewpoint of those engaged i
Jan 1, 1948
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Fully Automated Crusher is a Reality at Eagle Mountain
A completely automated primary crusher is now in operation at Kaiser Steel Corp.'s Eagle Mountain, Calif., iron mine. The word "completely" is italicized to underscore its literal meaning- automa
Jan 6, 1963
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Municipal-water Needs vs. Strip Coal Mining
By Gregory M. Dexter
Recent litigation in Pennsylvania between three coal-mining companies and a private water company resulted in the payment by the coal companies of the equivalent of about $500,000 to buy a new water s
Jan 1, 1949
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Hardenability Calculated From Chemical Composition
By M. A. Grossmann
THE hardenability of most steels can be predicted within 10 to 15 per cent provided the complete chemical composition is known, including "incidental" elements; and provided the as-quenched grain size
Jan 1, 1942
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Convalescent Europe ? Personal Observations of What Is Going On There
By Harvey S. Mudd
WHEN talking about Europe it is well to endeavor to keep politics and economics apart but they have become so intermingled in recent years that the discussion of one topic inevitably leads to the othe
Jan 1, 1947
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Stability And Associations Of Natural Tellurides
By W. C. Kelly, E. J. Essene, A. M. Affifi
Occurrences and associations of natural tellurides are constrained by the relative fugacities of Te, in specific mineralizing environments. Some are rare (e.g., FeTe2) and others absent (e.g. MoTe , Z
Jan 1, 1985
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Paper - Gravity Methods - The Eötvös Torsion Balance Method of Mapping Geologic Structure (With Discussion)
By Donald C. Barton
The theory of gravitation is based on Newton's law that any two bodies exert a mutual attraction which is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of t
Jan 1, 1929
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Opportunities for Mining Engineers
By Thomas T. Read
AT this time of the year, engineering schools are releasing a group of young men who probably are, on the average, in much the same attitude of mind as a person arriving at the terminal station of a r
Jan 1, 1926
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Capital Employed in the Petroleum Industry
By Frederick G. Coqueron, Joseph E. Pogue
FOR a number of years, the Department of Petroleum Economics of The Chase National Bank has been conducting a study of the capital employed in the petroleum industry. The technique followed is that of
Jan 1, 1944
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The Slip Interference Theory of Hardening
By M. G. Corson
THE theory of hardening by interference with slip which has been so clearly developed by Jeffries and his co-workers requires that an alloy to be amenable to age or heat hardening should contain amo
Jan 7, 1928