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Resources of Industrial Minerals - Discoveries of Potash in Eastern Utah (Mining Tech., Jan. 1945, T. P. 1755)
By B. W. Dyer
In 1924, the Crescent Eagle Oil Co., while drilling the salt section of the Paradox formation in Grand County, Utah, encountered a salt that did not appear to be sodium chloride. This salt was analyze
Jan 1, 1948
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Resources of Industrial Minerals - Quartz Crystal as a Mineral Resource (Mining Tech., Nov. 1945, T. P. 1916)
By Robert B. McCormick
World War II has developed a use for the nonmetal mineral quartz crystal that was unknown in World War I. During the interim period of peace, experimental work in the radio field with the piezoelectri
Jan 1, 1948
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Resources of Industrial Minerals - Owens Lake, California-Source of Sodium Minerals (Mining Tech., Sept. 1947, T. P. 2235)
By George D. Dub
Owens Lake is at present a source of important nonmetallic minerals, sodium carbonate (soda ash, Na2CO3); sodium sesquicarbonate (trona, Na2CO3.NaHCO3.-2H2O) and borax, (Na2B4O7.10H2O). Owens Lake
Jan 1, 1948
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Prospecting, Examination and Description of Deposits - Examination and Valuation of Chrysotile Asbestos Deposits Occurring in Massive Serpentine (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, T.P. 2285)
By Michael J. Messel
The critical shortage of asbestos fiber in the world today brings to the foreground the question of locating and developing new deposits. The object of this paper is to discuss some of the more import
Jan 1, 1948
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Prospecting, Examination and Description of Deposits - Asbestos-fiber Exploration and Production Forecasts by Core Drilling, Jeffrey Mine, Asbestos, Quebec (Mining Tech., Jan. 1946, T.P. 1952)
By Charles D. Borror, George K. Foster
The Jeffrey mine of the Canadian Johns-Manville Co., Limited, is in the town of Asbestos, situated approximately 100 miles northeast of Montreal and about the same distance southwest of Quebec, in Ric
Jan 1, 1948
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Preparation of Industrial Minerals - Laboratory-scale Flotation of Brown Rock Phosphate (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, T.P. 2239, with discussion)
By J. F Haseman, J. E. Davenport
In the brown rock phosphate fields of Tennessee there are large deposits of phosphate matrix in which quartz is a major constituent of the gangue, and which cannot be beneficiated by the conventional
Jan 1, 1948
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Preparation of Industrial Minerals - Beneficiation of Over-spray Porcelain Enamel (Mining Tech., Sept. 1947, T.P. 2253)
By Donald W. Scott
This paper describes the application of ore-dressing methods to the reclamation of milled frit from over-spray, or waste, porcelain enamel. Frit is the name given by enamelers to a granulated glass
Jan 1, 1948
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Preparation of Industrial Minerals - Recovery of Resin from Utah Coal (Mining Tech., May 1947; Coal Tech., May 1947, T.P. 2166)
By Ernest Klepetko
A notable amount of fossil resin exists in many of the bituminous coal beds of Utah. The upper part of these show a marked concentration of resin, which occurs primarily in the fracture seams. In gene
Jan 1, 1948
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Preparation of Industrial Minerals - Potassium Carbonate from Wyomingite (Mining Tech., July 1944, T.P. 1738)
By A. George Stern, Stanley J. Green, C. E. McCarthy
The national interest prompts consideration of any new source of mineral wealth even though the immediate need may be of minor importance. A critical shortage of potash in the United States during the
Jan 1, 1948
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Preparation of Industrial Minerals - The Recovery of Pyrite from Coal Mine Refuse (Abstract) (Mining Tech., July 1944, T.P. 1744; TRANS AIME (1944) 157, 141
By David K. Mitchell
The mineral pyrite (or marcasite) occurs in coal beds as balls, lenses, veinlets and bands. Several million tons are w-asted annually on the refuse dumps from coal mining and coal-preparation activiti
Jan 1, 1948
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Preparation of Industrial Minerals - The Firing of Rotary Kilns with Powdered Coal (Mining Tech., Sept., 1946, T.P. 2042)
By W. C. Knoblaugh
Rotary kilns are adaptable to many fuels, but this paper deals principally with the use of powdered coal. The observations and conclusions presented are based on rotary kilns used in the manufacture o
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - The New Cement Plant of the Universal Atlas Cement Company at Northampton, Pennsylvania (Mining Tech., Sept. 1943, T.P. 1619)
By L. G. Sprague
The fact that this latest and most modern of the Universal Atlas Cement Company's plants at Northampton, Pa., is the fifth to be built on these same properties, and their development has been coi
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Problems of Mining and Processing Mineral Aggregates (Mining Tech., Nov. 1943, T.P. 1649, with discussion)
By Nathan C. Rockwood
The title of this paper, I understand, was suggested by professional mining engineers as an opportunity for someone to pose problems rather than to offer solutions for them, but the paper will merely
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Mining and Treatment of Clay near Mt. Holly Springs, Pennsylvania (Mining Tech., Jan. 1944, T.P. 1655)
By Richard M. Foose
Five miles southwest of Mt. Holly Springs, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, the Philadelphia Clay Co. has been mining and milling a white clay since 1896; for use in white cement, as a filler in rubbe
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Roofing Granules (Mining Tech., Mar. 1944, T.P. 1725)
By G. W. Josephson
Since the earliest years of recorded history the durability and protective qualities of asphalt and tar have been known and utilized. The mummies of early Egyptian kings were coated with asphaltic mat
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Three Roofing-granule Plants in Pennsylvania (Mining Tech., Jan. 1945, T.P. 1787, with discussion)
By Richard M. Foose
Most of the roofing granules produced in Pennsylvania are made by two companies at three plants. The Advance Industrial Supply Co. has three quarries and a mill at Gladhill Station, in southern Adams
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Alabama Flake Graphite in World War II (Mining Tech., July 1945, T.P. 1908)
By Hugh D. Pallister, Richard W. Smith
The Alabama flake-graphite industry has flourished only in times of war when importations of foreign graphite for crucible use have been greatly curtailed or cut off. World War I was a boom period and
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Glass Sand and a Glass Industry in Puerto Rico (Mining Tech., Nov. 1945, T.P. 1939, with discussion)
By Howard A. Meyerhoff, J. Earl Frazier
It is not known when silica sand was first noticed along the north coast of Puerto Rico, but the first mention of its occurrence was made in 1922, by N. L. Britton,1 who described its presence in isol
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - Muscovite Mica in Brazil (Mining Tech., Sept. 1946, T.P.1972)
By Donald D. Smythe
This paper describes briefly the topography and geology of the region where the mica-bearing pegmatites are found and discusses prospecting, the quality of the mica, its preparation, and evaluation of
Jan 1, 1948
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Description of Operations - The New England Mica Industry (Mining Tech., May 1946, T.P. 2024)
By E. N. Cameron, H. M. Bannerman
During the years 1942-1934, about 125 New England deposits were mined for sheet and punch mica, and many others were briefly prospected. During this period the Geological Survey, United States Departm
Jan 1, 1948