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Blasting Practices At The New Cornelia Open-Pit Copper Mine
By Harry H. Angst, Reuel A. Cochrane
THE successful exploitation by opencut methods of the low-grade porphyry copper deposits is due to the economical handling of large tonnages. Large tonnages are possible only if the rock material is b
Jan 1, 1941
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Geophysical Exploration For Ores
By Max Mason
IN 1923 a Western mining company was experimenting with the device of an inventor designed to locate buried ores by radio. Because the progress was slow and the results were confusing, the company beg
Jan 1, 1927
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Technical Papers and Notes - Extractive Metallurgy Division - The Rate of Infiltration of Metals
By K. A. Semlak, F. N. Rhines
NFILTRATION is a term used to designate that i- process by which the pores of a metal powder are filled with a relatively low-melting liquid metal through the action of capillary forces. This is accom
Jan 1, 1959
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Dust Collection in Coal Processing and Handling
By Robert W. Fullerton, Barry G. McMillan, Donald T. King, Henning E. Soderberg
INTRODUCTION Dust control in coal preparation and related transport is a multi- faceted problem which must be anticipated whenever dry, fine coal is subject to rough handling which can disperse it
Jan 1, 1979
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British Columbia Paper - The Limestone-Granite Contact-Deposits of Washington Camp, Arizona.
By W. O. Crosby
Washington Camp, in Santa Cruz county, Arizona, is a small and little-known mining-district situated on the lower, eastern slope of the Patagonia mountains, about 20 miles east of Nogales and a like d
Jan 1, 1906
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Economics - Economics of Proration (With Discussion)
By Joseph E. Pogue
Proration in the petroleum industry has come to mean a method for curtailing the production of crude petroleum by artificial effort, and it is in this sense that the term is employed throughout this p
Jan 1, 1932
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Canadian Paper - Nitrogen in Steel (with Discussion)
By C. Baldwin Sawyer
During the last half century, much time has been devoted to investigations of the effect of nitrogen on the physical properties of steel, but in all discussions of results there is considerable doubt
Jan 1, 1923
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Canadian Paper - Nitrogen in Steel (with Discussion)
By C. Baldwin Sawyer
During the last half century, much time has been devoted to investigations of the effect of nitrogen on the physical properties of steel, but in all discussions of results there is considerable doubt
Jan 1, 1923
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Aluminum - The Ammonium Sulphate Process for Production of Alumina from Western Clays.
By A. T. Sweet, C. E. Plummer, H. W. St. Clair, S. F. Ravitz
The ammonium sulphate process for recovering alumina from clays was proposed by Rinman, Buchner, and others many years ago, and more recently various modifications have been investigated both here ari
Jan 1, 1944
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Institute of Metals Division - Some Effects of Temperature and Hydrostatic Pressure on Interfacial Tensions in the Nickel-Lead System
By Edward E. Hicke, Charles A. Stickels
The dihedral angle of liquid-lead inclusions in solid nickel has been measured as a function of temperature from 371 to 816 C at zero pressure. and as a function of pressure up to 50,000 psi at 317 an
Jan 1, 1964
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Microradiography - A New Metallurgical Tool
By S. E. Maddigan, B. R. Zimmerman
MOST metallurgists are well acquainted with the contributions already made to the study of metals by the use of X-rays. On the one hand, the radiographic method is constantly becoming of increasing im
Jan 1, 1944
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Cyprus Mines Copper Again
By J. L. Bruce
AFTER six years of war-enforced idleness, Cyprus copper mines are operating again. This relatively long shutdown seems infinitesimal when compared with something like seventeen hundred years of inacti
Jan 1, 1947
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Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - A Thermodynamic Theory of the Fracture of Metals (Metals Tech., Feb. 1947, T. P. 2131, with discussion)
By Edward Saibel
The various theories that have been advanced to explain or predict the conditions under which a metal fractures may be divided into two categories: First, there are the macroscopic theories general
Jan 1, 1947
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Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - A Thermodynamic Theory of the Fracture of Metals (Metals Tech., Feb. 1947, T. P. 2131, with discussion)
By Edward Saibel
The various theories that have been advanced to explain or predict the conditions under which a metal fractures may be divided into two categories: First, there are the macroscopic theories general
Jan 1, 1947
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Institute of Metals Division - Measurement of Kirkendall Effect in the Iron-Chromium System
By E. J. Pasierb, H. W. Paxton
Mavkers ill a diffusion couple in the iron-chromium system move towards the high chromium side indicating Dcr > DFe at the marker composition. By a combituztion of measurements of D& and D a: a func
Jan 1, 1961
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Natural Gas Technology - Testing and Analyzing Low-Permeability Fractured Gas Wells
By L. Cichowicz, K. K. Millheim
The constant-rate drawdown test performance for a low-permeability, verticany fractured gas well was investigated. A series of gar wells were tested by flowing each well at constant rate until the da
Jan 1, 1969
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A Review of Subsidence Experiences in the Southern Coalfield New South Wales, Australia
By William A. Kapp
INTRODUCTION Coal is being mined from beneath residential areas, structures, bodies of water and other surface features in the coalfields to the north, south and west of Sydney. The particular pro
Jan 1, 1982
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Baltimore Paper - A List of Minerals Containing at Least One Per Cent. of Phosphoric Acid
By William P. Blake
The occurrence and distribution of phosphorus is one of the most important questions with which the steel-maker has to do. Large sums are invested in processes for the removal of this element from ore
Jan 1, 1893
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Basic Trends in Mineral Industries Education
By Edward Steidle
IT has been said that "the command of nature has been put into the hands of man before he knows how to command himself," and what we see about us gives particular emphasis to this observation. If this
Jan 1, 1933
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Papers - Recent Developments in the Tennessee Phosphate Industry (T. P. 1053, with discussion).
By Paul M. Tyler, Herbert R. Mosley
Strategically situated in almost the heart of the leading fertilizer-consuming area of the United States, Tennessee long has ranked second only to Florida as a phosphate-producing state. Since 1932 it
Jan 1, 1942