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Metallurgy of Copper - Reverberatory Tonnages Reach 1500 per Day Waste-Heat Boiler Installations ImprovedBy P. D. I. Honeyman
DURING 1938 many copper companies again felt the economic pinch and smelter operations were often on a reduced basis which some- times resulted in intermittent operations and complete shutdowns. Durin
Jan 1, 1939
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Beneficiation Of Scheelite Ores By Gravity ConcentrationBy E. H. Burdick
THE difficulties inherent in table concentration operations as applied to gold, silver, lead and zinc ores, are accentuated in the scheelite mill, which has a flowsheet that is similar in general prin
Jan 1, 1942
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IV. Orthorhombic SystemBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
1. Normal Class (25) Barite Type 2. Hemimorphic Class (26) Calamine Type 3. Sphenoidal Class (27) Epsomite Type Mathematical Relations of the Orthorhombic System Crystallographic Axes. - The ort
Jan 1, 1922
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22. Copper Deposits in the Nonesuch Shale, White Pine, MichiganBy J. J. Fritts, J. L. Patrick, T. L. Wright, C. O. Ensign, W. S. White, J. W. Trammell, J. C. Wright, D. J. Hathaway, R. J. Leone
The copper deposit at White Pine, Michigan, from which a little more than 5 per cent of United States primary copper currently is produced, is a large stratiform orebody, 4 to 25 feet thick and severa
Jan 1, 1968
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47. Geology and Ore Deposits of the East Tintic Mining District, UtahBy D. R. Cook, W. M. Shepard, H. T. Morris
The East Tintic district in central Utah has produced ores of gold, silver, copper, lead, and zinc valued at more than $120,000,000. All of this ore has been produced from blind ore bodies in Paleozoi
Jan 1, 1968
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Industrial Minerals - Effect of Ultrasonic Energy of Chrysotile AsbestosBy E. Martinez
The effect of ultrasonic energy transmitted through a liquid on chrysotile asbestos was investigated. Ultrasonic energy was effective in fiberization of chrysotile crudes as well as standard grades of
Jan 1, 1963
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Howe Memorial Lecture - The Development of Research and Quality Control in the Modern Steel Plant (Metals Technology, April 1943)By Leo F. Reinartz
It was with humility that I accepted the invitation of the Board of Directors of our Institute to deliver the Twentieth Howe Memorial Lecture. Many previous lecturers could speak from personal experie
Jan 1, 1943
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Howe Memorial Lecture - The Development of Research and Quality Control in the Modern Steel Plant (Metals Technology, April 1943)By Leo F. Reinartz
It was with humility that I accepted the invitation of the Board of Directors of our Institute to deliver the Twentieth Howe Memorial Lecture. Many previous lecturers could speak from personal experie
Jan 1, 1943
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Superlatives and the SuperflousBy T. A. Rickard
The purposes of composition are various; one purpose, for instance, is to make a record for the writer's own use, as in a diary. That does not involve responsibility to others. There is also the
Jan 1, 1931
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Recent Developments in ClassificationBy A. M. Gaudin
THE purpose of ore dressing is to separate the rough ore into one or several valuable concentrates and a discarded tailing. The first step is to crush the ore so that the resulting particles may be in
Jan 2, 1927
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Manufacture and .Electrical Properties of Manganin - Discussion (ba86ec33-61fb-4c0c-9384-1f799d43b181)F. G. SMITH, Waterbury, Conn.-I would like to ask whether small amounts of iron give the maximum resistance at a low temperature, and if the large amounts of iron raise the temperature at which the ma
Jan 12, 1919
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Beneficiation Of Dolomitic Idaho Phosphate Rock By The TVA Diphosphonic Acid Depressant ProcessBy S. S. Hsieh, J. R. Lehr
Bench scale beneficiation studies were made on Idaho dolomitic phosphate rock using the TVA carbonate flotation process. The process used diphosphonic acid as a phosphate mineral depressant and fatty
Jan 1, 1986
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Further Discussion - Further Discussion on Water Gas Reservoirs: Uncertainty in Reserves Evaluation From Past HistoryBy W. Hurst
The authors of this paper, in substituting values in a material balance equation associated with a gas reserve and a water drive, cannot find sustainment of what the gas in place should be; therefore,
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Benefication of Adirondack MagnetiteBy R. G. Fleck, W. R. Webb
Iron ore mining in the Adirondack region of northern New York dates back to the Revolutionary War. It is recorded that Benedict Arnold in his campaigns in the Lake Champlain area during the American R
Jan 4, 1950
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Extractive Metallurgy Division - Stoichiometry of Lead TellurideBy I. Cadoff, E. Miller, K. Komarek
Jan 1, 1960
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Minerals Beneficiation - Relation of Magnetic Susceptibility to Mineral CompositionBy David R. Mitchell, Ernest M. Spokes
There is evidence that study of minerals now considered to have susceptibilities too low for magnetic separation should be continued. Present concepts may be false. INFORMATION on magnetic properti
Jan 1, 1959
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Part X - The 1967 Howe Memorial Lecture – Iron and Steel Division - Growth of Composites from the Melt – Part IIBy M. C. Flemings, F. R. Mollard
Two-phase Pb-Sn alloys, ranging in compositiotz from 12 to 26 at. pct Pb, were unidirectionally solidified in a convection-fvee system, with thermal gradients in the liquid of up to 480°C per cm. Plan
Jan 1, 1968
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Development and Use of Industrial ExplosivesBy Arthur La Motte
I NDUSTRIAL explosives, as distinguished from military explosives, include high explosives and blasting powder. The high explosives which are best known are straight dynamite, gelatin dynamite, ammoni
Jan 1, 1924
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Sinking With The Hydro-Mucker At Mather "B" ShaftBy Westwater, J. S.
The Mather mine of The Negaunee Mine Co. embraces nearly all of Sections 1 and 2, T47N, R27W. within the limits of the cities of Negaunee and Ishpeming on the Marquette iron range of Michigan's U
Jan 1, 1949
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Transportation Of Molten Blister Copper By Rail From Smelter To RefineryBy Frederic Benard
PRIOR to 1936, the Ontario Refining Co. received all incoming blister copper from The International Nickel Company's smelter in the usual form of 460-lb. cakes, or slabs. These were received in o
Jan 1, 1938