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Papers - Austenite-pearlite Transformation and the Transition Constituents (With Discussion)
By Albert Sauveur
Some writers believe that when austenite transforms completely into pearlite on slow cooling through the thermal critical range, such transformation does not imply the formation of any of the so-calle
Jan 1, 1931
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Gold Deposition in the Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming
By Lawrence Wright
THE occurrence of gold, gold-silver, silver-lead-zinc ores in the post-Cambrian sediments in the Black Hills of South Dakota, and their genetic relationship to the Tertiary intrusives, is well known a
Jan 1, 1936
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Steep Pitch Mining Of Thick Coal Veins (ea73b8b0-bcfa-4f7b-b28c-3daec90985a3)
By W. G. Whildin
This paper will be confined to a discussion of the methods in use in the property of the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. in the Panther Creek valley. Only the methods used in mining the Mammoth vein will
Jan 12, 1914
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Milling At The Permanente Cement Plant (0a28b8c3-9e83-424e-99d5-3b52f4454f3e)
By A. M. Kivari
OPERATIONS at the cement plant of the Permanente Corporation, in the hills about 45 miles south of San Francisco and 12 miles west of San Jose, are interesting to the members because of the adoption o
Jan 1, 1941
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Retreatment Of Corundum Tailings At Craigmont
By A. G. Roach
THIS paper deals with a plant built under joint agreement between the Canadian and United States Governments to supply the strategic mineral, corundum, at a time when African production was dwindling
Jan 1, 1946
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Rosebud Sidesteps Permit Delays With Scraper Stripping
By John D. Wiebmer
There are those in the Colstrip, Mont., area who can still remember the opening of the Rosebud mine in 1923. For 35 years it was a steady employer of 80 or 90 residents who produced coal for the railr
Jan 12, 1979
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New York Paper - Mineral Resources of British India
By Sarat C. Rubra
Geographically, British India includes India or Hindustan proper, Burma, and a part of Beluchistan. In ancient times India occupied a very important position anlong the producers of minerals and me
Jan 1, 1904
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Reaction Kinetics in Processes of Nucleation and Growth (abc4daef-e199-4be2-9993-281dc656305f)
By William Johnson
IT is now recognized that several important types of reactions in metallic systems proceed by the formation of nuclei and the growth of these nuclei. The process of freezing is a simple example of thi
Jan 1, 1939
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Geology, Mining, And Uses Of Strategic Pegmatites
By Richard H. Jahns
Such minerals as beryl, lepidolite, sheet muscovite, spodumene, and tantalite-columbite are obtained chiefly from pegmatite bodies that are internally zoned. As shown by examples of such pegmatites fr
Jan 1, 1951
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New York Paper - Notes on the Geology of Sonora, Mexico
By E. T. Dumble
In the Bosquejo Geoldgico de Mexico, published in 1897 by the Secretaria de Fomento as Nos. 4, 5 and 6 of the Boletin del Institute Geologico de Mexico, the Director, Jose C. Aguilera, after a detaile
Jan 1, 1900
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Improvements in the Metallurgy of Quicksilver (e77ba05e-b4c4-4821-9bc8-946735a273ae)
By L. H. Dushak
DURING the war period of quicksilver activity there were a number of departures from what may be termed the classical quicksilver metallurgy. Attempts were made to beneficiate low-grade ores by gravit
Jan 1, 1930
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Bauxitic Raw Materials
By James W. Shaffer
Aluminum is the most abundant metallic element of the earth's crust and is a constituent of nearly every type of rock (Clark, 1924, p. 13). The sources of aluminum and aluminous material most com
Jan 1, 1975
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Unwatering The Tiro General Mine By Air-Lift
By S. F. Shaw
IN 1913, the Tiro General mine, at Charcas, S.L.P., Mexico, which had been making from 125 to 150 gal. of water per min., was allowed to become flooded, after all the pumps had been removed, and in 19
Jan 2, 1920
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Season Cracking of Brass
By Gerald Edmunds
Although the phenomenon of season cracking is still imperfectly understood, there seems to be ample evidence that season cracks are propagated by the combined action of corrosion and a stress of eithe
Jan 1, 1945
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III. Hexagonal System
By William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
A. Hexagonal Division 1. Normal Class (13) Beryl Type 2. Hemimorphic Class (14) Zincite Type 3. Pyramidal Class (15) Apatite Type 4. Pyramidal-Hemimorphic Class (16) Nephelite Type 5. Trapezohedr
Jan 1, 1922
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Papers - Physical and Chemical Properties of Coal in Relation to Classification (With Discussion)
By K. A. Johnson, H. F. Yancey
Physical properties have been used for a long time in characterizing different kinds of coal, and such physical properties as friability and slacking have been included along with chemical properties
Jan 1, 1932
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Papers - Zinc - The Warner-Ingalls Zinc-roasting Process
By Munroe F. Warner
As originally built, the plant of the American Zinc and Chemical Co. at Langeloth, Pennsylvania, was based upon the Joplin and Wisconsin fields as primary sources of zinc ores, the ores being the then
Jan 1, 1937
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Structural Relations Of Ore-Deposits
By S. F. Emmons
"The obscurity which still veils from us the true nature of veins will become more acid more cleared up when they can be considered in connection with the geological structure of the regions in which
Jan 1, 1913
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New York Paper - Anthracite Mining Costs (with Discussion)
By R. V. Norris
It was stated in a former paper1 that an intensive study of anthracite costs was being made by the engineers of the United States Fuel Administration. The results of this study are now available and a
Jan 1, 1920
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New York Paper - Researches on Fire Damp (with Discussion)
By Enrique Hauser
FiRE-damp is a mixture of methane with other inert gases or combustible gases. The inert gases in question are carbonic acid, water vapor, nitrogen, etc. The combustible gases are hydrogen, ethane, et
Jan 1, 1916