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Papers - Engineering Research - Connate Water in Oil and Gas Sands (With Discussion)
By Ralph J. Schilthis
Several investigators1-8 have reported evidence of the existence of native or connate water in oil-and-gas-bearing strata. Both water and salt have been detected in cores of oil sands that yielded oil
Jan 1, 1938
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New York Paper - The Use of Pulverized Coal as a Fuel for Metallurgical Furnaces (with Discussion)
By H. R. Barnhurst
It would be a difficult matter to trace from the beginning the very few improvements made in the burning of fuels prior to 1860. Donbtless the crossing of the sticks of wood in building a mood fire ea
Jan 1, 1914
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New York Paper - Some Suggestions Regarding Construction of Hot Blast Stoves (Discussion, pp. 322 and 337)
By Linn Bradley, W. W. Strong, H. D. Egbert
A hot-dry method of cleaning the gas from blast furnaces has been shown1 to conserve the sensible heat energy of the gas, and in general it thus permits of a higher flame temperature. The electrical m
Jan 1, 1917
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Determination Of Dust Losses At The Copper Queen Reduction Works
By J. Moore Samuel
INTRODUCTORY BEFORE the year 1909, no measurements of dust losses and flue gases had been made at the Copper Queen Reduction Works, at Douglas, Ariz. At that time the "unaccounted" loss of the smelte
Jan 6, 1916
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Rail And Truck Haulage At Canadian Asbestos Open-Pit
By K. V. Lindell
THE 70-mile serpentine belt of eastern Quebec, producing 70 pct of the world's chrysotile, has 11 operating mines, two of which are underground, eight are open-pit, and one is both open-pit and u
Jan 1, 1952
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Geophysics - Testing for Copper and Zinc in Canadian Glacial Soils
By C. T. Bischoff
This paper describes the results of testing with colorimetric methods, using "dithizone", soil samples taken over various known copper and zinc deposits covered by glacial till. Variation in results i
Jan 1, 1955
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Boston Paper - The Blake System of Fine Crushing and its Economic Results
By Theodore A. Blake
At the Chicago meeting of the Institute, May, 1884,I had the pleasure of announcing the introduction of a new machine for fine crushing, or The Blake multiple-jaw crusher, which, in combina tion with
Jan 1, 1888
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Technical Notes - Surface Structures on Single crystals Produced from Melt
By F. D. Rosi
IN the production of single crystals by the Bridg-man method of solidification from the melt in vacuum at a crucible lowering rate of 0.25 in. per hr, a cellular structure was frequently observed in c
Jan 1, 1954
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Gold, Silver, Copper Alloys
By Frederic E. Carter
THE gold, silver, copper alloys have been the subject of several fairly complete investigations by Jänecke, Sterner-Rainer1 and others, and indeed it would seem as if almost too much labor had been ex
Jan 1, 1928
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Principles of Flotation, V-Conception of Adsorption Applied to Flotation Reagents
By Ian Wark
IN defending the chemical theory of flotation, Taggart, del Giudice and Ziehl have criticized1 the views of those who prefer to attribute the effects of certain flotation agents to adsorption. Perhaps
Jan 1, 1936
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An Explanation of the Flotation Process
By Arthur Taggart
INTRODUCTION THE flotation process for the concentration of ores is a method by means of which one or more of the minerals in the ore (usually the valuable ones) are picked up by means of a liquid fi
Jan 8, 1916
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New York Paper - The Location of Mining Claims upon Indian Reservations
By Will L. Clark
He who enters a mining claim within an Indian reservation of the United States of America acquires no rights thereby, because of the fact that the lands within such Indian reservation are not a part o
Jan 1, 1915
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Coal - Flyash-Based Structural Materials: Recent Developments Utilizing the WVU-OCR Process
By C. F. Cockrell, K. K. Humphreys, H. E. Shajer
It is quite conceivable that the question of using coal or an alternate fuel in the future by large industrial consumers may be decided on the basis of possible profitable utilization of flyash. Accor
Jan 1, 1968
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Washington D.C. Paper - The Crystalline Rocks of Virginia compared with those of New England
By C. H. Hitchcock
A brief resiclence in Virginia hasenabled me to examine some of its crystalline strata, and a few hints, concerning their correspondence with similar rocks elsewhere, may be of service to those who ar
Jan 1, 1882
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Electrical Properties Of The Intermetallic Compounds Mg2Sn And Mg2Pb
By W. D. Robertson, H. H. Uhlig
INTRODUCTION THE intermetallic compounds Mg2Sn and Mg2Pb are two of the important series of stoichiometric compounds pounds which magnesium forms with elements of the fourth group of the periodic s
Jan 1, 1948
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General - Forming Properties of Thin Sheets of Some Nonferrous Metals (With Discussion)
By C. R. Fischrupp, M. D. Helfrick, W. A. Straw
In the manufacture of telephone apparatus a number of nonferrous sheet metals arc blanked and formed to produce a wide variety of parts, which are generally small in size because of space and weight r
Jan 1, 1931
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Engineering Reasearch - Use of Electrode Spacing in Well Logging (Petr. Tech., March 1943)
By Richard Zinszer
Application of electric logs has been used in correlation of subsurface structure to determine the size and shape of the oil reservoir. Such a knowledge is hardly complete until saturation and prod
Jan 1, 1943
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Engineering Reasearch - Use of Electrode Spacing in Well Logging (Petr. Tech., March 1943)
By Richard Zinszer
Application of electric logs has been used in correlation of subsurface structure to determine the size and shape of the oil reservoir. Such a knowledge is hardly complete until saturation and prod
Jan 1, 1943
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Institute of Metals Division - Thermodynamic Properties of Titanium-Oxygen-Hydrogen Alloys
By M. T. Hepworth, R. Schuhmann
Hydrogen solubility measurements were made on a series of Ti-O alloys, and a portion of the 800°C isotherm for the Ti-O-H system was determined. Activities of oxygen and titanium were calculated from
Jan 1, 1962
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Tensile Properties of Rolled Magnesium Alloys, I-Binary Alloys with Aluminum, Antimony, Bismuth, Cadmium, Copper, Lead, Nickel, Silver, Thallium, Tin and Zinc
By John McDonald
THE amount of published literature in the field of mechanical proper-ties of magnesium alloys is not great; particularly with respect to rolled alloys. Haughton and Prytherch1 have summarized most of
Jan 1, 1939