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The New Works at Clausthal for Dressing OresBy John C. F. Randolph
(Read at the Amenia Meeting, October, 1877.) Tits establishment being now in full working order, it has seemed of considerable professional interest to collect together, in a concise form, the variou
Jan 1, 1878
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Meet The Authors (526c857f-5f81-4780-9e2f-a297df550be2)[ ] S. H. Ash (Mining Industry Continues with Lower Fatal-Injury Rates, P. 257) was born in Roslyn, Wash. and attended Lehigh University and University of Washington. He received a B.S. and E.M. deg
Jan 1, 1952
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Recent Trends in the Gypsum Industry in CanadaBy Heber Cole
THE gypsum industry of Canada, like all others connected with the construction business, has felt the full effect of the depression during the past few years, and sales of its products have been great
Jan 1, 1935
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Estimating the Combustion Drive Air Requirements by Back-Flowing an Injection Well in the Delaware-Childers FieldBy J. C. Todd
The volume of air needed to move the combustion wave through each acre-foot of the reservoir is a very important quantity for engineering economic analyses. A new method, which involves backflowing th
Jan 1, 1970
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The Electrical Conductivity Of Molten Blast-Furnace SlagsBy A. E. Martin, Gerhard Derge
IF the molecular constitution of molten slags were better known, the nature of chemical reactions in slags and between slags and metals could be better understood and as a consequence might be better
Jan 1, 1943
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Gold Lodes of the Willow Creek District, AlaskaBy James C. Ray
DURING the summer of 1931, I spent four months in a study of the Willow Creek district, Alaska. This work was part of a general investigation of the territory contiguous to the route of the Government
Jan 1, 1932
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The Institute Forum. (06dff2a2-3902-41c2-b9e7-0c5a2202c18e)MR. CHARLES F. RAND, President, BUTTE, MONT., APR. 29, 1913. American Institute of Mining Engineers. Dear Sir: In conversation here with Mr. Sales, who is much interested in the work of the Commit
Jan 5, 1913
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Applied Geology At The Magma Mine, Superior, ArizonaBy Wilson D. Michell
THE Magma copper vein trends east-west, dips 70° south, and cuts through a 6000-ft thickness of limestones, quartzites, shale, diabase, and schist. The vein is itself a fault with -a horizontal offset
Jan 1, 1947
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Environment, Structure, And Organization Of The Mineral IndustryBy Fredrick C. Kruger
Anthropological diggings have revealed that the American Indians carried on intertribal trade in flint, obsidian, ochre, and other mineral commodities, indicating that mining was practiced before the
Jan 1, 1976
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Concerning The Method Of Preparing Gold For Spinning.IN addition to the gold and silver that b drawn, a certain kind is also prepared that is called spun; not that it is spun as the word says, but because a linen thread is covered with it so that it see
Jan 1, 1942
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Reservoir Engineering – Equipment - The Use of Transparent Three-Dimensional Models for Studying the Mechanism of Flow Processes in Oil ReservoirsBy P. van Meurs
This paper describes a technique which permits visual observation of oil displacement processes througlrout the interior of a porous structure as thick as 2 in. A model having glass walls is filled wi
Jan 1, 1958
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Metal Mining - The Latouche System of Mining as Developed at the Beatson Mine, Kennecott Copper Corporation, Latouche, Alaska (with Discussion)By Be Van Presley
There has been developed at Latouche a rather unusual system of mining which, for want of a better name, has been called the "Latouche system of mining." It is a modified form of shrinkage stoping app
Jan 1, 1928
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Product Research and Trends in the Steel IndustryBy A. B. Kinzel
IT has often been stated that the steel industry did no research or development work in the decades preceding 1920. If restricted to organized research on the quality and field of application of struc
Jan 1, 1935
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California Paper - The Lee Long-Wall Mining-MachineBy H. Foster Bain
The recent admirable paper on the general subject of coalcutting machines presented to the Institute by Mr. E. W. Parker* leaves but little to be desired so far as the well-proven and widely-used mach
Jan 1, 1900
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New York Paper - The Macquisten Tube Flotation ProcessBy O. B. Hofstrand
Solid bodies mill float in a liquid by reason of lower specific gravity, or of peculiar form, or of repellent action towards the liquid which prevents them from overcoming the resistance of its surfac
Jan 1, 1913
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Iron and Steel Division - Analysis of Factors that Limit the Production Rate and Coke Rate in the Iron Blast FurnaceBy W. O. Philbrook
An engineering analysis indicates that the coke rate in present blast-furnace practice is set not by chemical or thermal needs but to give adequate charge permeability for economical driving rates. An
Jan 1, 1955
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Some Observations on Sponge Iron and the Properties of the Direct Steel Made from It (49badcbe-f418-4582-8634-078337123b86)By R. S. Dean
MANY studies have been made of the properties of steel produced by adding varying amounts of sponge iron to the charges used in steel-making furnaces.1-3 The results of these previous studies, however
Jan 1, 1935
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Institute of Metals - Effect of Reheating on the Al-Cu-Ni-Mg and the Al-Cu-Fe-Mg (Piston) AlloysBy Samuel Daniels
The Al-Cu-Ni-Mg alloy is much benefited by heat treatment and, in such condition, is preferable to the Al-Cu-Fe-Mg alloy either as cast or as heat-treated, when both are reheated to temperatures of fr
Jan 1, 1926
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Alternative Reclamation Methods Hold Promise for the WestA piece of arid, strip-mined land in southeastern Washington recently yielded over 22 bushels of winter wheat per acre-without irrigation. The surprising crop yield is the product of an innovative rec
Jan 12, 1978
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Alumina From Clay By The Lime-Sinter MethodBy F. R. Archibald, C. F. Jackson
THE prospect of winning aluminum from clay was recorded almost a century ago at a time when the metal was no more than a curiosity.? As the industry developed, and it has probably developed faster tha
Jan 1, 1944