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Experience With The Habegger Mole
By Hans W. Brodbeck
The main problem in tunneling without the use of explosives lies in the development of tools capable of continuous mechanical destruction of rock, resulting in a fragmentation which lends itself to a
Jan 1, 1970
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Papers - Yield Point of Single Crystals of Iron under Static Loads (T. P. 893, with discussion)
By R. F. Mehl, M. Gensamer
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, 1938
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Novel Techniques In Lixiviants And Site Restoration
By Frederick W. DeVries
Since we first agreed to present this talk we have learned that some of you may have been covering ground we intend to discuss: Bob Schechter, Daryl Tweeton, Don Seidel, Herb Burgman; however, the ide
Jan 1, 1979
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Papers - Well Logging - The Use of Electrode Spacing in Well Logging (T. P. 1590)
By Richard H. 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, 1946
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Development and Production Problems in High-pressure Distillate Pools
By E. V. Foran
AMONG the many newer disclosures that have accompanied the petroleum industry's progressively deeper exploratory drilling is the increased frequency with which the operators are encountering rese
Jan 1, 1939
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Does the Wearing Power of Steel Rails Increase With the Hardness of the Steel ?
By Chas. B. Dudley
WHILE working, during the summer of 1877, upon the "Chemical Composition and Physical Properties of Steel Rails," the results of which are given in my report with this title, I was struck with the sur
Jan 1, 1879
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Longwall Development Problems
By Robert A. Stansbury
Keeping development ahead of retreat mining is a problem which occurs nearly everywhere longwall mining is used in the United States. As improved equipment technology has allowed the application of lo
Jan 1, 1981
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Concerning The Method Of Making The Assay Of The Ores Of All The Metals And Especially Of Those That Contain Silver And Gold.
THE assay of all metal ores is made by means of fusion and they are brought to their fineness in the same way as if they were a large quantity. However, I have told you of lead, tin, copper, and iron
Jan 1, 1942
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Salt Lake Paper - An Amendment to Sale’s Theory of Ore Deposition
By Frederick W. Bacorn
The paper of Reno H. Sales on Ore Deposits at Butte, Mont.,' is a careful and painstaking work, an important contribution to the literature of the subject. As is almost inevitable in a work of su
Jan 1, 1915
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Requirements For Stability In Open Pit Mining
By R. M. Stewart
INTRODUCTION Requirements for achieving economic slope stability in open pit mining must not only be met during the operating stages but in all preceding stages of mine development. In many operati
Jan 1, 1972
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Drying and Processing of Pebble Phosphate in the Florida Field
By Charles Becker
THE practice of drying phosphate in Florida is as old as the industry, which began a little more than half a century ago. The methods, however, have changed considerably. At first, the natural process
Jan 1, 1936
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New York Paper - Manufacture of Semisteel for Shells (with Discussion)
By Frank E. Hall
The needs of the World War showed the necessity of a metal stronger than cast iron which would supplement the supply of steel. SO patriotic metallurgists were spurred to new efforts to improve the sta
Jan 1, 1922
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Montreal (Annual) Paper - The Phosphate Mines of Canada (See Discussion p. 1000)
By H. B. Small
The Ottawa river, the northeastern boundary of the Province of Ontario, and the dividing line between the latter and the Province of Quebec, has long been famous for the rafts of timber floated over i
Jan 1, 1893
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The Future of Mining
By Horace Winchell
IT IS OFTEN interesting to look backward and review the world's progress in any line of human endeavor. Our pride is flattered by our achieve-ments and our imagination stimulated by the compari-s
Jan 1, 1923
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Papers - Engineering Research - Behavior of Contents of High-pressure Reservoirs (With Discussion)
By Eugene A. Stephenson
In most instances the fluids produced from underground reservoirs have been described as they appear at the surface, and usually it has not been necessary to distinguish between surface and reservoir
Jan 1, 1938
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Mining - Economic Aspects of Coal Losses in Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia (With Discussion)
By James D. Sisler
Among the various studies made by the Coal Fact Finding Commission, appointed by President Warren G. Harding in 1922 to investigate all phases of the coal-mining industry in the United States and to r
Jan 1, 1931
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Heavy Metal Patterns in Stream Waters, Stream Sediments, and Selected Aquatic Life, Northern New Lead Belt, Southeast Missouri (518b4dd9-0c6f-459c-ae51-f92bb334ec63)
By Bhudeo N. Sinha, Paul Dean Proctor
Heavy metal contents in stream waters, sediments, and selected aquatic algae were determined for the upper Meramec River basin, Missouri, of 3905 km2 (1508 sq mi) area and site of the proposed and con
Jan 1, 1980
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Minerals Beneficiation - Wet Processing of Kaolin
By B. K. Asdell
Crude kaolin exhibits a wide particle size range in which kaolinite is the predominant mineral. Bene-ficiation by wet processing produces high-brightness white pigments. The wet processing techniques
Jan 1, 1968
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New York Paper - Petroleum Resources of Japan
By J. Morgan Clements
Petroleum has been known in Japan since at least 668 A. D., for a picture shows the presentation, during that year, to the Emperor Tenchi (Tenji) of "burning water" and ('burning earth" by his su
Jan 1, 1923
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The Economy Effected by the Use Of Red Charcoal
By B. Fernow
(Read at the Philadelphia Meeting, February, 1878.) THE question of preserving the forests in this country is an important one, not only to trades using wood but to the whole nation, and though agi
Jan 1, 1878