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Progress With The Guidance Of Anderton Shearer Loaders In The UKBy Peter G. Tregelles, Derek K. Barham
Introduction A successful step towards mechanisation of the collier's work was taken in 1954 when the first Anderton shearer loader was commissioned in Lancashire, and progress was reinforced in
Jan 1, 1981
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The Block Method of Top Slicing of the Miami Copper Co.By E. G. Deane
A METHOD of top slicing has been devised at the Miami Copper Co.'s mine at Miami, Ariz., which differs radically in some ways from the customary methods of top slicing. The area of that section
Jan 9, 1916
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Some Aspects Of The Use Of Oxygen In The Electric FurnaceBy J. M. Gaines
THE use of oxygen in electric furnaces is relatively old, and the practice has been employed by several steelmakers prior to the recent impetus given generally to the use of oxygen in steelmaking. Thi
Jan 1, 1947
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New York Paper - The Ore-Deposits of the Joplin Region, MissouriBy F. L. Clerc
The lead and zinc region of SW. Missouri is interesting, not only by reason of the value of its output, which ranges in the neighborhood of ten million dollars a year, but even more because of the fac
Jan 1, 1908
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Remarks on the Use of the Plummet-Lamp in Underground SurveyingBy Eckley B. Coxe
IN the anthracite coal regions of Pennsylvania the custom has been to sight either at an open light (generally a mine-lamp), or at the string of a plumb-bob. If the station was intended to be a perman
Jan 1, 1873
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Geology Of The Manganese Ore Deposits Of The Gold Coast, AfricaBy Albert Sir Kitson
THE manganese ore deposits of the Gold Coast, British West Africa, occur in very ancient rocks, of both sedimentary and metamorphic types. In. certain respects they strongly resemble those of India an
Jan 5, 1927
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The Mining and Metallurgical Laboratories of the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyBy Robert H. Richards
OF the several professions-the chemist, the civil engineer, the mining engineer, the mechanical engineer-the courses of instruction, as arranged at the scientific schools, differ considerably as to th
Jan 1, 1873
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Florida Paper - The Northeastern Bituminous Coal-Measures of the Appalachian SystemBy George S. Ramsay
The Appalachian system contains the largest area of all known Carboniferous coal-fields. Beginning near the north line dividing Pennsylvania and New York, it extends southwest through West Virginia, s
Jan 1, 1896
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Philadelphia Paper - The Economy effected by the Use of Red CharcoalBy B. Fernow
The question of preserving the forests in this country is an impor tant one, not only to trades using wood but to the whole nation, and though agitated for many years has not received that general con
Jan 1, 1879
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The Formation Of Bonanzas In The Upper Portions Of Gold-VeinsBy T. A. Rickard
INTRODUCTORY. THE presentation to the Institute, eight years ago, of the paper of Pošepny on " The Genesis of Ore-Deposits " has borne fruit in much fresh: investigation, as is evidenced, for examp
Jan 1, 1902
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Institute of Metals Division - Calorimetric Investigation of Cadmium, Silver and Zinc TelluridesBy M. J. Pool
The partial molar heats of solution in liquid tin of cadmium, silver, tellurium, and zinc have been measured at 655°. 700°, and 750°K by liquid-metal solution calorimetry. Silver, cadmium, and zinc ar
Jan 1, 1965
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Recent Improvements in the Mining Practice of the Tri-State DistrictBy C. W. Nicolson
THE Tri-State zinc and lead-mining district is in the northeast corner of Oklahoma, the southeast corner of Kansas and the southwest corner of Missouri. The area throughout which active mining has bee
Jan 1, 1938
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Washington Paper - The Roller-Pallet System for the Manufacture of BricksBy Clemens Catesby Jones
One of the achievements of the present century has been the development of brick-making from the crude and humble handicraft of the individual to a potential industry employing machinery, requiring im
Jan 1, 1901
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Opportunities For The Less Developed Nations In The Mineral Resource FieldBy George E. Kruger, William F. Butler
The less developed nations maintaining a free enterprise economy (to which this chapter is addressed) have real and substantial opportunities to lay a foundation for general economic progress by using
Jan 1, 1964
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Note on the Crystal Structure of the Alpha Copper-tin AlloysBy Robert Mehl
IT is generally understood by workers in the field of the crystal struce ture of metallic alloys that terminal solid solutions are of two types, the substitutional and the interstitial. In reviewing t
Jan 1, 1929
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Part IX - Communications - Replication of Fine Structure in MartensiteBy S. Shapiro, G. Krauss
RECENT investigations1 3 of the products of marten-sitic transformation in Fe-Ni and Fe-Ni-C alloys have made use of light microscopy to describe mar-tensitic fine structure. The application of conven
Jan 1, 1967
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The Formation of Fissures and the Origin of Their Mineral ContentsBy A. J. Brown
THE causes that have formed fissures in the earth's crust, and the agencies that have converted them into metallic beds, are amongst the most important and interesting subjects that can engage th
Jan 1, 1874
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New York Paper - The Reopening of the Tilly Foster Iron-MineBy F. H. McDowell
DURING the last eighteen months the Tilly Foster Iron Mine Company, the President of' which is Mr. E. I?. Hatfield and the Managing Director Mr. B. G. Clarke, has been carrying out a plan
Jan 1, 1889
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Baltimore Paper - Contribution to the Early History of the Industry of Phosphate of Lime in the United StatesBy William P. Blake
The late Dr. Ebenezer Emmons of Albany, one of the geologists of the Survey of New York and the author of The Taconic System, brought to notice as early as 1838" a peculiar concretionary and lamellar
Jan 1, 1893
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Chattanooga Paper - The Mode of Combustion in the Blast-furnace HearthBy Prof John E. Church
It is a well-known fact that under similar conditions a ton of pig iron can be made from any ore with less fuel when charcoal is used than when coke or anthracite is employed for heating. The cause of
Jan 1, 1879