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Progress And Prospects Of Marine Mining
By A. A. Archer
Marine mining is here defined as the commercial recovery of minerals other than oil and natural gas from the surface of, or below, the seabed by operations connected only indirectly with the land. The
Jan 12, 1973
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Teaching Geophysics in a Department of Physics
By David Keys
APPLIED geophysics is the youngest child of that old branch of learning, that has been known from Aristotle's time as physics-the constitution and laws of nature. The mother science, with the hel
Jan 1, 1938
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Concerning The Origin And Nature Of Copper And Its Ore.
EVERY intelligent and practical investigator of minerals says that copper ore is found in various regions of the world and that among others Italy is very rich in it. But very little is mined there, p
Jan 1, 1942
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Air Pollution by Industrial Fumes, Gases, and Dusts
By Louis C. McCabe
The control of dusts and fumes of submicron size is involved in many process industries. This paper presents in tabular form the quantitative data from a number of metallurgical operations and discuss
Jan 9, 1950
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Tax Planning: A Guide To Financing In The Mining Industry
By T. K. Matthews
Minerals are mined as a one-time crop, and the processing of one ton of ore results in there being one ton less to be recovered from the deposit. Although some minerals occur in greater abundance than
Jan 1, 1969
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Editorial - PAINTING SCREENS
By ME ME
IT just so happens that we do our best thinking while painting wood- work and last Saturday while finishing up the screens (the bugs come late where we live) the paint very nearly ran out. By adding t
Jan 8, 1951
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The Mount Lincoln Smelting Works, At Dudley, Colorado
By Edward D. Peters
IT frequently occurs in the establishment of reduction works, in an entirely new and untried mining district, that the metallurgist in charge finds considerable difficulty in determining the process b
Jan 1, 1874
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Increased Cost Of Running The Institute
Owing to circumstances which are entirely unavoidable, the cost of rendering to Institute Members the services which they have been ac-customed to expect from the Institute has increased enormously, e
Jan 12, 1919
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Lake Superior Paper - Effect of Sewage on Iron
By Charles O. Thompson
In 1867 the city of Worcester walled in the Mill Brook for its main sewer. This stream, one of the important affluents of the Blackstone River, flows through the city in a southwestenly course from
Jan 1, 1881
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High-Zinc Slags In Australia
By Philip Morse
THE Australian lead-smelting plants began to use charges carrying high zinc percentages somewhat earlier than was common with American plants. When lead smelting first started in Australia the immense
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Flotation - Solubility Product and Rubble Attachment in Flotation (T. P. 2078, Min. Tech., Sept. 1946)
By M. D. Hassialis, A. F. Taggart
ark' observed some years ago that collector-coating reactions with xanthates and with fatty acids clearly follow paths parallel to those prescribed by the familiar mass-action law for reactions i
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Flotation - Solubility Product and Rubble Attachment in Flotation (T. P. 2078, Min. Tech., Sept. 1946)
By M. D. Hassialis, A. F. Taggart
ark' observed some years ago that collector-coating reactions with xanthates and with fatty acids clearly follow paths parallel to those prescribed by the familiar mass-action law for reactions i
Jan 1, 1947
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Annual Lectures
The Howe Memorial Lecture, in memory of Henry Marion Howe, Past President of the Institute, was authorized in April, 1923, as an annual address to be delivered by invitation under the auspices of the
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Miscellaneous - Methods of Tubing High-pressure Wells
By H. C. Otis
During the past year or two considerable time and money have been spent in developing equipment for tubing large-volume high-pressure oil and gas wells without loss of production. That the efforts hav
Jan 1, 1930
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White-Burning Clays of the Southern Appalachian States (9edd19b5-70b5-4f3b-8d3d-bd472da8eace)
Discussion of the paper of JOEL H. WATKINS, presented at the New Fork meeting, February, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 98, February, 1915, pp. 391 to 411. H. Rims, Ithaca, N. Y.-It is interesting
Jan 5, 1915
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Recent Progress in Steel Manufacture Abroad
By J. King Hoyt
IN both Sweden and England rapid progress is being made in metallurgical development, and the steel industry in both countries is distinctly on the mend. There has been some industrial trouble in Swed
Jan 7, 1928
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Utah and Montana Paper - Coal Production in Utah, 1886
By Charles A. Ashburner
A very limited development has been made of the coal-fields of this Territory. This is to be accounted for by the fact that a number of the coal-fields lack railroad transportation, by the distance of
Jan 1, 1888
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Philadelphia Paper - Rolling vs. Hammering Ingots
By Alexander L. Holley
IN order to put sufficient work on steel ingots for rails, they must be reduced from about 12 inches square. As this cannot be done at one heat, they are first drawn down to about 7 inches square, and
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The Magnetometer As A Geological Instrument At Sudbury (cadea811-3f9b-4002-abc8-81cc006519a9)
By McIntosh F. Galbraith
This paper describes the use of the magnetometer, under geological direction, in exploration of the Sudbury nickel district. The writer's experience at Falconbridge has led him to the belief that
Jan 1, 1942