Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Accepting Responsibility - Something Any Successful Engineer Must Learn
By W. H. Bassett
One of the difficulties for many young engineers is the acceptance of responsibility. Even though they start as assistants to older men, they hesitate to offer positive opinions. They often make repor
Jan 1, 1932
-
Teaching Thrift Duty Of Engineers
No greater opportunity for public service has ever been presented to the engineers of the United States, as a class, than the campaign to make thrift a permanent American habit, conducted through the
Jan 7, 1919
-
Montreal (Annual) Paper - The Cause of Faulting
By John A. Church
In a recent paper read before the Institute it was said of faults that "the sensible expression of the fracture is an earthquake." This notion, which has been expressed before, though usually as a the
Jan 1, 1893
-
Flash Roasting of Iron concentrate
By George Beavers
FLASH roasting of iron concentrate is in the experimental stage at Copperhill. The problem is peculiar in that the iron concentrate is predominantly pyrrhotite; the ratio of that mineral to pyrite bei
Jan 1, 1934
-
Spokane Paper - The Conservation of Coal in the United States
By Edward W. Parker
If one is to place any credence at all in the reports published in the daily press, the subject of conservation has been a very lively topic of conversation during the past 60 days, and it does not ap
Jan 1, 1910
-
Fallacies
The greatest single obstacle in the path of constructive action in making conservation a reality is the inherent discord in the hearts of men. A perfect society doubtless is many millenniums removed f
Jan 1, 1950
-
Conveyor-Belt Calculating Chart
By J. D. Mooney
(San Francisco sleeting, September, 1915) THE accompanying chart has been drawn for the convenience of engineers as a means of quickly determining the correct number of plies of conveyor belts op
Jan 9, 1915
-
Institute of Metals Division - On the Relationship of Texture Changes of Cold-Rolled Face-Centered-Cubic Metals During Recrystallization (Discussion, p. 1270)
By Y. C. Liu, W. R. Hibbard
An analysis of the relationship between the deformation and recrystallization textures in face-centered-cubic metals is presented. The analysis assumes that orientations of the secondary as well as th
Jan 1, 1956
-
Petroleum Production in the Dutch East Indies and Western Borneo (Sarawak and Brunei) during 1932
THE total crude production from the Dutch East Indies, and the British Protectorates of Sarawak and Brunei for 1932 is given in the following table: BARRELS BARRELS (42 GAL.) (42 GAL.) North Sumatr
Jan 1, 1933
-
Playing The Odds In Rock Mechanics
By Gregory B. Baecher
Rock engineering involves uncertainties which are large and difficult to quantify. The traditional design approach to these uncertain- ties has been conservatism, and has been satisfactory to the exte
Jan 1, 1982
-
Friendly Possibilities of Engineering Societies
Engineers and masters of enterprise are waking fast to the realization that there is something more in the relations of employer and employee than mechanical output, which can be measured mathematical
Jan 1, 1919
-
Meteorological Influence On Radon Concentration In Drillholes
By Allan B. Tanner
The effects of radon in drillholes on gamma-ray logs have been described by L. S. Hilpert and C. M. Bunker1 Since these effects may cause drastic error in the evaluation of uranium deposits, it is use
Jan 7, 1959
-
Mineral Potential of South Korea
By Jerrold Marcus
The peninsula is roughly 700 miles long and 180 miles wide. The southern portion is the American-sponsored Republic of Korea and the northern half is the Soviet-promulgated People's Democratic Re
Apr 1, 1956
-
Florida Paper - A Water-Cooling Apparatus (see Discussion p. 960)
By Carl Henrich
In the planning and erection of smelting-works, especially of such as contain the modern large water-jacketed blast-furnaces, we are often confronted with an insufficiency in the watersupply. It may b
Jan 1, 1896
-
Chattanooga Paper - Colored Mining Labor
By Alfred F. Brainerd
HAVING had considerable practical experience in the management of colored mining labor in the South, I have thought a few observations upon its peculiarities might interest those not personally famili
Jan 1, 1886
-
Industrial Limestone Resources Along The Ohio River Valley Of Kentucky
By Garland R. Dever, Preston McGrain, George W. Ellsworth
Abstract-Limestone resources for industrial, constructional, and agricultural uses occur on the surface and at minable depths in several areas along the Ohio River and its navigable tributaries in Ken
Jan 4, 1978
-
New York Paper - The Gold-Bearing Veins of Bag Bay, Near Lake of the Woods
By Peter McKellar
The district around Bag bay in Shoal lake, meat of Lake of the Woods, in the Ontario western gold-fields, is attracting considerable attention at the present time as a gold-producer. A large number of
Jan 1, 1900
-
The Block- Method Of Top* Slicing Of The Miami Copper Co. (65992d3d-b729-4461-86bc-9f736961ccd6)
By E. G. Deane
THE CHAIRMAN (P. G. BECKETT, Globe, Ariz.).-The mining of large orebodies has in the last few years been such a big factor in the copper output of this State, and, in fact, of the whole country, I fee
Jan 12, 1916
-
Crushed Limestone Aggregates for Concrete
By Katherine Mather
This paper is an attempt to put together petrographic, physical, and chemical data about the large and varied group of rocks generally called limestones. Results of the properties of these rocks on th
Jan 10, 1953
-
Meet The Authors (c457e900-d919-4630-a8f7-8d7253d7c37d)
W. N. Triplett (Geology of the Silver-Lead-Zinc Deposits of the Avalos-Providencia District of Mexico, P. 583) was born in Tecumseh, Mich., and attended the University of Michigan and Massachusetts In
Jan 1, 1952