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Uses Of Fly Ash In The American Electric Power System
By H. P. Hatch
Ash is a material that many people leave to nature to handle. Others sometimes sweep it under the rug to be disposed of by someone else. In our business we cannot do either. In fact the American Elect
Jan 1, 1966
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Map Series No 4 November, 1962 - Piezometric Surface And Areas Of Artesian Flow Of The Floridan Aquifer In Florida July 6-17, 1961
By Henry G. Healy
Observation well (Hydrographs are shown for these selected wells) Contour represents the height, in feet referred to mean sea level, to which water would have risen in tightly cased wells that pen
Jan 1, 1966
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Canadian Potash Developments 1965 - Introduction
By C. M. Bartley
In world-wide mining circles countries become known by the principal minerals they produce. The production of iron, copper, phosphate and sulphur in the United-States-has-been particularly significant
Jan 1, 1966
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Geological Communication In The Industrial Minerals
By Robert L. Bates
United States production of the industrial minerals, ahead of that of the metals since 1946, has shown a steady and rapid growth. By 1963, their value was more than twice that of the metals. Yet paper
Jan 1, 1966
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Methods Of Mining Bedded Deposits - Introduction
By John P. Weir
The planning of an underground mine for successful extraction of a bedded deposit in sedimentary rocks requires the integrated evaluation of many interdependent problems. The development and coordinat
Jan 1, 1966
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Limestone And Dolomite: Geologists And Percentage Depletion Allowances
By Byron N. Cooper
The Revenue Act of 1926 provided for five simple categories of natural resources to have the benefit of depletion allowances. In the 1947 Revenue Act, the number was increased to twenty-five, and in t
Jan 1, 1966
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Determination of Strain Energy in Muscovite by Simultaneous Measurement of Enthalpies and Weight Loss ? Introduction
By William Lodding
That grinding may change a crystalline material both in a physical and in a chemical sense has been shown by a number of authors in recent years. Thus Mackenzie (1) and Bartha (2) reported the effects
Jan 1, 1966
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Hypothesis for the Effect of Temperature on Coal Flotation
By Shiou-Chuan Sun
The froth flotation of coal, differing greatly from that of most minerals1-5, is not improved but rather impaired by temperatures higher than room temperature6-10 This phenomenon has long taunted us f
Jan 1, 1966
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Recent Advances In Drillability
By James Paone
Drillability of rocks by mechanical means is closely related to the physical properties of the respective rocks, Various approaches by previous investigators on rock drillability are presented, as wel
Jan 1, 1966
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Water, Clay And Rock Soundness
By James R. Dunn
The nature of water and clay in carbonate rocks is currently being investigated at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute by various thermal and sorption techniques. Two basic concepts 'led to the pre
Jan 1, 1966
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New York Cement Producers Adjust To Geologic Complexities
By Severn P. Brown
Cement plants in the central Hudson River valley utilize limestones of the Helder-bergian Series of the Lower Devonian. Chiefly calcilutites, calcarenites, and cherty calcisiltites, these rocks repres
Jan 1, 1966
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The Effect Of Antitrust Laws On The Collective Bargaining Process
By Paul C. Lingo
Two recent antitrust cases, coming from widely separated areas, different industries and involving wholly different facts were decided by the Supreme Court on June 7, 1965. The decisions in there two
Jan 1, 1966
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The Effect Of Subsidence On Pipelines
By James G. Tilton
Subsidence resulting from mining operations, has been the object of sporadic study for many years. Reports have shown that subsidence has ranged from minor settlement detected only by precise measurem
Jan 1, 1966
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Layered Deposits - Syngenetic And Epigenetic.
By George W. Bain
Deposits of metals in only slightly disturbed strata have been attributed to sedimentation processes contemporary with deposition of the strata. Recently this origin has been extended' to a great
Jan 1, 1966
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Sedimentology Of The Salem Limestone In Indiana
By Ned M. Smith
The Mississippian Salem Limestone, from which dimension stone is quarried in Indiana, is principally a calcarenitic rock formed of fossil bryozoans, echinoderms, and specimens of Endothyra. Numerica
Jan 1, 1966
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Petrographic Analysis Of Northern Indiana Carbonate Aggregates
By N. B. Aughenbaugh
A study was made to determine those petrographic parameters that are correlative with carbonate-aggregate quality as indicated by the Los Angeles abrasion and absorption tests. Samples collected at 28
Jan 1, 1966
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High Intensity, Wet Magnetic Separators ? I. Introduction
By J. A. Bartnik
In recent years, the need has become more and more accute for a high capacity, high intensity, wet magnetic separator for the concentration of finely ground, paramagnetic minerals. As a result of this
Jan 1, 1966
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Map Series No. 15 May, 1965 - Sulfate Concentration In Water From The Upper Part Of The Floridan Aquifer In Florida
By William J. Shampine
The Floridan aquifer, which underlies all of Florida, yields water with a sulfate content of less than 50 parts per million in the north-western part and throughout most of the center of the State. In
Jan 1, 1966
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Limestone Deposits Vs. Beneficiation
By John A. Ames
Limestone for portland cement must be beneficiated to produce uniform raw material for the kiln. Careful quarrying and selective recovery are factors in this process, but the chief aspects of benefici
Jan 1, 1966
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Acoustic Drying Of Coal ? Introduction
By H. V. Fairbanks
It is estimated that millions of tons of coal fines are unsaleable each year due to difficulty of drying them economically with conventional mechanical dewatering and thermal drying equipment. The dif
Jan 1, 1966