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Mining Engineering Editorial (a60175cf-b6f5-4a18-838e-3b5e58ee7127)
Critical Shortage of Engineers M AN POWER commitments for defense, superimposed on normal domestic requirements, exceed the available supply of labor. The armed services, industry, and the professions
Jan 4, 1951
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Magnetic Separation
By William J. Bronkala
Magnetic Separation is a proven means of effectively obtaining purification and/or concentration of mineral products. In addition, magnetic separators are widely used for tramp iron removal in the pro
Jan 1, 1978
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Designing Ore-Treatment Pilot Plants
By Frank M. Stephens, Robert D. Macdonald
As processes for handling low-grade or complex ores become more complicated and as new methods are found, the need arises for more complete and detailed pilot-plant studies to protect the capital inve
Jan 5, 1959
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Development in the Use of Steel for Underground Support
By F. J. Haller
The need for permanent, fireproof support indicated structural steel sets. Experience over the past six years, involving more than five miles of permanent underground openings, has proved that steel i
Jan 4, 1950
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Relation Of Ash Composition To The Uses Of Coal
By A. C. Fieldner
ASH in coal has always been regarded as an undesirable substance, as the heat content of a coal decreases in direct proportion to its ash content. It represents so much inert material that has to be t
Jan 1, 1926
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Special Funds and Joint Activities (7d3fa72a-ae63-46b4-9aeb-79f6cbd0aefc)
The Institute conducts jointly with the American Society of Civil Engineers, American Society of Mechanical Engineers and American Institute of Electrical Engineers, certain activities as listed below
Jan 1, 1923
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The Problem of the Temperature Coefficient of Tensile Creep Rate
By J. J. Kantner
CREEP investigators have made extensive studies to determine the interrelation of stress, temperature and the tensile creep rates of metals. It has been suggested that at small stresses the secondary
Jan 1, 1937
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White-Burning Clays Of The Southern Appalachian States
By Joel Watkins
THE terms kaolin, china clay, ball clay, and paper clay are more or less loosely and interchangeably applied to a large class of white-burning clays. These clays are made up chiefly of hydrous amorpho
Jan 2, 1915
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Iron Ore: The Big Picture
By E. H. Rose
It must be evident to almost everyone by now that a massive transformation is occurring in our iron ore economy. Its equal has been seen only once before in the entire history of the North American st
Jan 9, 1961
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Fluid Retention In Leach Dumps By Capiliary Action
By William A. Kennedy, Jonathan R. Stahl
This paper deals with the phenomenon of water held in a leach dump due to capillarity. Water is shown to be retained in the fine pores of the ore as well as in the interstices between the rock and soi
Jan 1, 1974
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Radioactivity Exploration With Geiger Counters
By Henry Faul
MEASUREMENT of radioactivity of rocks and ores has developed into a complete method of geophysical exploration. The problem falls into three natural categories: (I) surface radiation measurement in th
Jan 1, 1947
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Are You Going to "Present a Paper"?
By S. Marion Tucker
THE aggregate number of "papers" read within any one year before more or less bored and bewildered audiences is simply appalling. We have seventy to eighty engineering societies alone, not to speak of
Jan 1, 1940
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Mineral Economics - An Outline Of The Field
By F. G. Tryon, F. E. Berquist
Our task is to make a prospecting trip over the whole field of mineral economics which other lectures of this series will explore in detail. The old timers who really understand mining warn us that it
Jan 1, 1932
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Bethlehem Paper - The Iron-Ores and Coals of Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee
By John B. Porter
Within the last year or so, a great deal has been heard about Southern iron ; even the Eastern markets have felt the effect of the cheap Alabama ores and coals, and public attention has again been dra
Jan 1, 1887
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Atlantic City Paper - Mineral Deposits of Santiago, Cuba (Discussion, p. 1008)
By Harrison Souder
In view of the proposed visit of the Institute to Cuba this winter, the following brief sketch of the principal mineral deposits near Santiago de Cuba has been prepared largely from notes taken in Feb
Jan 1, 1905
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Leaching Of Mineral Sulphides By Selective Oxidation At Normal Pressure
By G. Bjorling
The opening oxidation of a hydrometallurgical treatment of natural sulphides must for several reasons be so controlled that a maximum of the sulphide sulphur is transformed into elemental. If the oxid
Jan 1, 1973
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Structural Control Of Copper Mineralization, Bagdad, Arizona
By Charles A. Anderson
THE Bagdad copper deposit is of the disseminated type (porphyry copper) occurring in a quartz monzonite stock of late Cretaceous or early Tertiary age. This stock, located essentially at the intersect
Jan 1, 1947
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Well Log Applications in Coal Mining and Rock Mechanics
By L. O. Bond, R. P. Alger, A. W. Schmidt
Well logging provides valuable information for planning coal mining operations. In addition to locating, defining, and evaluating coal beds, electrical logs indicate the relative competence of roof an
Jan 1, 1972
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The Iron Deposits Of Daiquiri, Cuba
By Waldemar Lindgren
Introduction To the miner, as well as to the geologist, the eastern part of Cuba is a most interesting region. Here we find, in contrast to the moderate relief predominating elsewhere in the island,
Jan 10, 1915
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Seismograph Prospecting for Oil (de917419-792e-46b2-8d4d-42e6604a122a)
By Walter English
THE four papers making up this symposum have been prepared espe-cially for those who have no knowledge of seismograph prospecting. To many people mathematics is a formidable subject, and many are disc
Jan 1, 1939