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Power Line – Manpower – Part 1
By Thomas V. Falkie, Robert Stefanko
Much has been said and written recently about the manpower problem in the mining industry. The coal segment of the industry has been scrambling to staff and man its companies and operations in order t
Jan 1, 1971
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Institute of Metals Division - Metallurgy Behind the Decimal Point
By E. E. Schumacher
IN a laboratory devoted to the furtherance of the science of communication, the breadth and variety of the problems encountered are challenging to a metallurgist. In my own long association with the B
Jan 1, 1951
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Reservoir Engineering – Laboratory Research - Process Variables of In Situ Combustion
By John N. Dew, William L. Martin, `
This paper describes the results of a laboratory investigation conducted to obtain data for an evaluation of the in situ combustion process as a method of producing crude oil from reservoirs. Air and
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Convalescent Europe ? Personal Observations of What Is Going On There
By Harvey S. Mudd
WHEN talking about Europe it is well to endeavor to keep politics and economics apart but they have become so intermingled in recent years that the discussion of one topic inevitably leads to the othe
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - Coking - Test for Measuring the Agglutinating. Power of Coal (With Discussion)
By S. M. Marshall, B. M. Bird
For a number of years European investigators have used laboratory methods of predicting the probable strength of coke made from coal, and recently several investigators in the United States have repor
Jan 1, 1930
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The Slip Interference Theory of Hardening
By M. G. Corson
THE theory of hardening by interference with slip which has been so clearly developed by Jeffries and his co-workers requires that an alloy to be amenable to age or heat hardening should contain amo
Jan 7, 1928
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Twenty Billions of American Gold: Is It a White Elephant?
By Oliver M. W. Sprague
THIS gold problem is full of complications and can hardly be handled adequately or comprehensively in any short period of time. Perhaps I might begin by mentioning a few aspects of the subject about w
Jan 1, 1940
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Clays
By Haydn H. Murray, Sam H. Patterson
The term "clay" is somewhat ambiguous un¬less specifically defined, because it is used in three ways: (1) as a diverse group of fine-¬grained minerals, (2) as a rock term, and (3) as a particle-size t
Jan 1, 1975
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Frictional Sliding And Fracture Behavior Of Some Nevada Test Site Tuffs
By C. Morrow
Deformation studies were performed on tuffaceous rocks fran Yucca Mountain, Nevada Test Site to determine the strengths and coefficients of friction under confining pressures from 10-50 MPa at room te
Jan 1, 1984
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Symposia - Symposium on Powder Metallurgy - Nickel-iron Alloys Produced by Powder Metallurgy (Metals Tech., Aug. 1946, T. P. 2046, with discussion)
By Laurence Delisle, Arron Finger
The alloys formed by the addition of nickel to iron by conventional metallurgical procedures show physical properties that differ widely from those of the individual metals. The effect of alloying on
Jan 1, 1946
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Symposia - Symposium on Powder Metallurgy - Nickel-iron Alloys Produced by Powder Metallurgy (Metals Tech., Aug. 1946, T. P. 2046, with discussion)
By Arron Finger, Laurence Delisle
The alloys formed by the addition of nickel to iron by conventional metallurgical procedures show physical properties that differ widely from those of the individual metals. The effect of alloying on
Jan 1, 1946
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Core Analysis - Analysis of Fractured Limestone Cores
By Frank C. Kelton
A method is outlined for the analysis of large cores, developed primarily for the purpose of obtaining reliable data on fractured or vugular limestones. Porosity and fluid saturations are determine
Jan 1, 1950
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Billion-Dollar Expansion of US Iron Pellet Facilities is Underway
In 1974, iron pellet production in the Great Lakes region reached the 53-million-tpy level, accounting for more than 88% of the nation's pellet production. By 1978, pellet output from the Great L
Jan 11, 1975
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Borax And Borates Part 1
By Ward C. Smith
The industry of producing and processing boron compounds is called the borax industry because the chief product is borax, the decahydrate of disodium tetraborate. For the same reason, it is common to
Jan 1, 1960
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Tire Management Program is Serious Business at St. Joe Minerals
By William H. Mount
St. Joe Minerals Corp. has a long operating history of utilizing rubber-tired, trackless mining equipment in its Southeast Missouri Lead Belt underground mines. The company's first completely tra
Jan 4, 1976
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Graphical Representation Of The Operating Points For Two-Fan Ventilation Systems (ceafb6fb-81cc-4186-a358-a8cdd7507260)
By Y. J. Wang
A graphical technique by which the operating points for a two-fan ventilation system can be represented as the intersection of the modified fan curves is described. In constructing the diagram, the ai
Jan 1, 1986
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Iron Blast-Furnace Slag Becomes Important Constructional Material
By W. H. Caruthers
ECONOMIC utilization of all by-products has long been the goal of American industry. One of the first groups that was popularly supposed to have achieved its aim was the meat-packing industry, which r
Jan 1, 1940
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Manganese-Ore In Unusual Form.
By William P. Blake
(Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910.) A DEPOSIT of manganese-ore near Tucson, Ariz., merits notice by reason of the peculiar form in which it occurs, and as a striking. example of ore-deposition by v
Sep 1, 1910
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Part VIII - Hydrogen Reduction of Dense Hematites
By N. O. Gray, John Henderson
Hydrogen-reduction data for naturally occurring single crystals and Prepared polycrystals of dense hematite have been presented. Results cover the temperature range 400o to 1000oC, for particles from
Jan 1, 1967