Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
A Mine, A Smelter, And A Railroad
By Robert Glass Cleland
BECAUSE of the country's vast mineral resources, Alexander Von Humboldt, the great German scientist who visited Mexico, or the Kingdom of New Spain, a hundred and fifty years ago, very aptly call
Jan 1, 1952
-
Research Possibilities of the Petroleum Industry
By H. W. Camp
RESEARCH is defined, scientifically, as a "sys- tematic investigation of some phenomenon, and also a search for hidden treasures." Chemists tell us that the hidden treasures of petroleum are far ric
Jan 4, 1928
-
Improvements in Roof Bolting Promise Greater Safety and Productivity
By Will B. Jamison
It is a fact that the most serious safety problems encountered in US underground coal mines are related to roof-bolting operations. It is also true that roof bolting is usually the operation which lim
Jan 7, 1977
-
Papers - Gold Supply Symposium - Possibilities of Gold from Low-grade Ore in South Africa
By F. Lynwood Garrison
The future of the Witwatersrand depends upon the possibility of mining and milling profitably the large tonnage of relatively low-grade gold ores known to exist in that area. The problem must be solve
Jan 1, 1931
-
Ductile Tantalum And Columbium
By Clarence W. Balke
SMALL buttons of fused tantalum have been produced by arc fusion in a vacuum, by drawing an arc between sticks of pressed tantalum and a tantalum-faced water-cooled copper block. However, ingots of ap
Jan 1, 1938
-
From Falling Creek To Zug Island
By M. O. Holowaty, C. M. Squarcy
Bituminous coal furnaces give way to coke, and by 1880, the American iron and steel industry was growing at a tremendous rate. In the twentieth century, the number of operating blast furnaces was cut
Jan 1, 1961
-
Biographical Notices - Hjalmar Sjögren
The cables brought the news last spring that the Institute had lost by death one of its most distinguished foreign members, Hjalmar Sjogren of Stockholm. For thirty-one years, Professor Sjogren had be
Jan 1, 1923
-
Biographical Notices - Hjalmar Sjögren
The cables brought the news last spring that the Institute had lost by death one of its most distinguished foreign members, Hjalmar Sjogren of Stockholm. For thirty-one years, Professor Sjogren had be
Jan 1, 1923
-
Colorado Paper - Avalanches
By B. E. Fernow
MINING interests in the Western mountains are very seriously affected by the danger to property and life from destructive snowslides and avalanches. This is a danger which the miner has largely brough
Jan 1, 1890
-
Wabush - A $300-Million Iron Operation
Wabush Mines is the largest single supplier of iron ore to the Canadian steel industry, with 42% of its 6 million tpy of iron ore production going to the company's two Canadian owners-The Steel C
Jan 1, 1970
-
Roll Scale as a Factor in the Bessemer Process (e9e5d7e8-1f8e-44a7-992a-286035072df9)
By A. Patton
E. T. McCLEARY, Youngstown, Ohio (written discussion).-Perhaps there is no question before the steel manufacturers of America today that causes them more worry than that of maximum production, togethe
Jan 4, 1917
-
Temperature Measurements in Bessemer and Open-Hearth Practice (778c4ce0-21df-44c2-a07f-a033ac00d9f8)
By G. K. Burgess
J. W. RICHARDS, South Bethlehem, Pa.-I think my affections are still rather with the radiation pyrometer than the optical pyrometer, for practical use, and I wish that Prof. Burgess would use the two
Jan 4, 1917
-
Buffalo Paper - The International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa., with Special Reference to the Courses in Mining
By H. H. Stoek
Among the mining and metallurgical achievements of the latter part of the nineteenth century, not the least is the incep tion and successful prosecution by mining men of a technical educational moveme
Jan 1, 1899
-
Longwall Mining in Hardrock – Experience at San Francisco Manganese Ore Mine
By Milan Lipensky
A variation of the longwall retreat system using friction props developed in coal mining is used extract a sedimentary manganese deposit at the San Francisco mine, Autlan, Jalisco, Mex. The Compania M
Jan 12, 1964
-
The Constitution And Properties Of Copper-Rich Copper-Chromium And Copper-Nickel-Chromium Alloys
By Walter R. Hibbard, Robert I. O’Herron, Fred D. Rosi, Howard T. Clark
INTRODUCTION AND PREVIOUS WORK IN the search to find a copper-base alloy with high strength properties, it was considered that the addition of a small amount of an age-hardening element to a binary
Jan 1, 1948
-
Utah and Montana Paper - Engineering Relations of the Yellowstone Park
By Theo B. Comstock
TO the large majority of visitors the unique features of the National Park are interesting chiefly on account of their novelty. Scientists of all schools may find here food for reflection, and much th
Jan 1, 1888
-
Papers - Mining Geology - Extension of Oreshoots with Comments on the Art of Ore Finding
By Harrison Schmitt
IN the practice of ore finding the geologist is continually confronted with the question of oreshoot extension, so that the general problem seems worthy of systematic investigation. This problem appea
Jan 1, 1929
-
Broken Hill – A Living Legend
Conservatively, there are a half million square miles in Australia just like it, this spot near the western border of New South Wales. Space and distance are the elements. Mulga tree and salt bush, si
Jan 10, 1964
-
Milling Practice At Ozark Lead Company
By Arthur W. Griffith
Ozark Lead Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Kennecott Copper Corporation, was formed in 1961 to operate in the State of Missouri. The orebody presently being mined was discovered in January of 19
Jan 1, 1970
-
California Talcs
By Lauren A. Wright
The principal talc deposits in California are in a 200-mile belt paralleling the state's eastern border. The southernmost deposits represent selective alteration of early pre-Cambrian (?) carbona
Jan 1, 1950