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Rock In The Box - The Cooking Oil Saga-Or Engineering ImprovisationBy Bruce A. Kennedy
If it had not been for the persistent cold wind, the sun blazing out of a cloudless blue sky would have made it one of those warm, idyllic early spring days which attract the socalled "snowbirds" to N
Jan 1, 1971
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New York Paper - The Position of the American New Red SandstoneBy Persifor Frazer
Comparative columns expressing the series of rocks of the lower half of the Mesozoic age in this country and in Europe are not yet definitely established. The following represents a co-ordination of t
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Pittsburg Paper - The Conditions of Accumulation of Petroleum in the EarthBy David T. Day
In 1897 I published a proposed explanation for the variation in color and specific gravity of Pennsylvania oils. A resume of this subject mas also presented at the First International Petroleum Congre
Jan 1, 1911
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The Determination of Antimony in the Products Obtained by Roasting StibniteBy William Hall
THE product obtained by roasting stibnite is likely to contain some unoxidized antimony trisulphide and a mixture of antimony trioxide and antimony tetroxide. It was desired to determine, as accuratel
Jan 1, 1916
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Bridgeport Paper - Note on a Specimen of Native IronBy John Birkinbine
A specimen of brown hematite, taken from an iron-ore mine near Anniston, Alabama, exhibits a metallic streak or thread running throngh it. This specimen having been sent to me, I have no personal know
Jan 1, 1895
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Part XI – November 1968 - Papers - The Mechanical Properties of Physical Vapor Deposited TitaniumBy H. L. Marcus, C. D. Turk
Titanium was physically vapor-deposited by electron beam high rate evaporation. Rates of 50,000 and 85,000Å per min at deposition temperatures of 480°, 535°, and 595°C were used. Deposited thickness
Jan 1, 1969
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The Coal Industry in Northern Wyoming and the State of MontanaBy Walter J. Johnson
The coals in northern Wyoming and Montana are free-burning and non-caking and range from lignite to bituminous C in rank. Strip and underground mining are employed to supply railroad, utility, industr
Jan 12, 1953
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New Haven Paper - Development in the Size and Shape of Blast-Furnaces in the Lehigh Valley, as Shown by the Furnaces at the Glendon Iron WorksBy Frank Firmstone
In the summer of 1842 my father, William Firmstone, was engaged by Charles Jackson, Jr., of Boston, to examine the conditions in the Lehigh valley as a site for blast-furnaces using anthracite for fue
Jan 1, 1910
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Lake Superior Paper - The Zinc-Smelting Industry of the Middle WestBy H. C. Meister
The zinc-smelting industry of the United States has grown very rapidly in recent years and bids fair to outrival that of all other countries in the future. On account of the geographical situation of
Jan 1, 1905
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Easton Paper - The Mining Industry as Illustrated at the Vienna ExpositionBy R. W. Raymond
At the Liége meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, in August, 1873, and also at the Vienna Convention of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, at the end of August, and at the conven
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Coalesced Copper-Its History, Production and CharacteristicsBy H. H. Stout
IN the early fall of 1025, the writer was conducting, in the Ledoux and Co. labora-tory, New York, experiments directed to-ward ascertaining the effect on its impurity content when cathode copper was
Jan 1, 1940
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Buffalo Paper - Notes on the Roasting of the Hudson River CarbonatesBy Ingersoll Olmsted
These ores are of two classes, Bessemer and non-Bessemer, existing in separate, though adjoining, beds. Both are carbonates, with small admixtures of oxides and other combinations. To prepare them
Jan 1, 1889
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Applied Geology - Objectives, Procedures, And The Role Of The Mine GeologistBy W. C. Peters
Geologists take the role of mine geologist when they apply their science to the design and operation of a specific minerals project. In doing so, they use the entire spectrum of procedures in economic
Jan 1, 1984
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Institute of Metals Division - Transformation of Gamma to Alpha ManganeseBy E. V. Potter
For a nurnber of years, it has been known that manganese made by electro-deposition under certain conditions is ductile while under other conditions it is very brittle. The ductile metal is gamma mang
Jan 1, 1950
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Institute of Metals Division - The Study of the Structural and Transformation Characteristics of the Pressure-Induced Polymorphs in BismuthBy T. E. Davidson, A. P. Lee
It is known from the early work of Bridgman that the two lowest-pressure transitions (I-II and II-III) are accompanied by substantial and abrupt changes in resistivity and Volume. However, unlike the
Jan 1, 1964
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The Carbonic Acid Gas Process at the Kelley Run Colliery FireBy H. M. Chance
THE failure of the carbonic acid gas method at the Kehley Run Colliery has given rise to a conviction of the inefficienoy of the process; but a careful survey of the facts, and of the conditions under
Jan 1, 1881
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California Paper - The Characteristics and Conditions of the Technical Progress of the Nineteenth Century (Presidential Address at San Francisco)By James Douglas
At this last meeting of our Institute for the year 1899, it is appropriate that we should look back at the past. To review the century's progress in the exact sciences and the resulting arts t
Jan 1, 1900
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Pittsburg Paper - The Behavior of Copper-Slags in the Electric FurnaceBy Lewis T. Wright
I have long been aware that ferruginous copper furnace-slags if fused in the electric arc will yield metallic iron containing copper, and in order to confirm this knowledge, and to obtain further info
Jan 1, 1911