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Sketches of the New Mining District at Sullivan, MaineBy C. W. Kempton
IF New England were located in some distant and almost inaccessible region, there is no doubt that its mineral resources would have been ere this well developed and generally acknowledged, but laborin
Jan 1, 1879
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Pittsburg Paper - Systematic Exploitation in the Pittsburg Coal-SeamBy F. Z. Schellenberg
Systematic exploitation in the Pittsburg coal-seam on a large scale is simple where the boundaries of the property do not interfere by forcing drainage-, ventilation-, and transport-lines of entries t
Jan 1, 1911
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The Functions of Power Scrapers and Slackline Cablemay ExcavatorsBy Harry Roe
THE power drag scrapers and the slackline cableway excavator have been called "long-range excavators." Broadly, their field of usefulness is restricted to work in which their long range of action perm
Jan 1, 1937
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New York Paper - The Mayari Iron-Ore Deposits, CubaBy James F. Kemp
The Bulletin of the Institute for March, 1911, is chiefly devoted to papers upon the iron ores of northeastern Cuba. At that time information about the new developments in the peculiar brown hematites
Jan 1, 1915
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Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - The Mineral Wealth of JapanBy Henry S. Munroe
The earliest accounts we have of Japan represent the country as having great mineral wealth, especially of precious and useful metals. Marco Polo, the Venetian traveller, in the thirteenth century, wr
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Review of the Month (3b43ac1b-0dd4-4dcd-9c4f-be2aacdef823)AT THE beginning of September, the French eased their pressure against Germany and allowed the latter to, be granted an arrangement for its reparation payments in kind according to the Lubersac-Stinne
Jan 10, 1922
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Recent Improvements in Mining Practice on the Mesabi RangeBy Arthur Anderson
OUT of the depths of each business cycle we emerge with a stimulus for greater efficiency and a realization of progress in industrial technique. The recent years have not been an exception to this rul
Jan 1, 1938
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The Solubility of Nitrogen in Molten Iron-silicon AlloysBy J. C. Jr. Vaughan
ALTHOUGH a considerable amount of practical importance attaches to systems involving gases and molten metals, little is known regarding the effects of alloy elements upon the solubility of gases in li
Jan 1, 1939
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Sampling the Mining News (74c184d6-0f2b-4581-91c4-8e172271c847)Discovery of a deposit of magnetite ore estimated at 3 million tons and of quality sufficient to warrant mining has been located near Reading, Pa. by the Bethlehem Steel Corp. Last January; the compan
Jan 1, 1951
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Use Classification of Coal in the Portland Cement IndustryBy H. P. Reid
PORTLAND cement is manufactured under either of two general proc-esses, the wet or the dry. The raw materials in general consist of limestone, shells, marl, cement rock, clay, shale, blast-furnace sla
Jan 1, 1932
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Financial Analysis: A Tool For The Progressive Mining ManBy Daniel T. O’Brian
Exploration targets and results in the mining industry are commonly summarized in terms of tonnage and grade. Business appraisals require, as additional information, the expected profit or loss implie
Jan 10, 1969
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The Mantos Blancos Operation - Chile's New Integrated Copper ProducerBy Werner Joseph, Richard R. Knobler
When the first batch of refined copper ingots was cast at Mantos Blancos in January 1961, eight years of exploration, development and metallurgical pioneering by Mauricio Hochschild & Co. had come to
Jan 1, 1962
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The Origin of Petroleum (ee86c0bd-9391-4c5f-bed2-7a776da2011a)By E. Berl
THIS may be a most unnecessary paper-from what does crude oil come and how was it formed? Many people, inside and outside of the petroleum industry, believe that we have actually enough oil, and that
Jan 1, 1938
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Review of the Month (0e1de65c-634b-4019-be91-aeb662cc9d8c)MAY began with a general strike of the bituminous and anthracite coal miners in the United States in progress, while in Great Britain about three quarters of a million workers became idle by a lockout
Jan 6, 1922
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Roanoke, Va. Paper - The Ores of Cripple Creek, VirginiaBy C. R. Boyd
It would be a quite congenial task to attempt to describe all that extraordinary mineral wealth which is now giving such prominence to the region from the James River to the Tennessee line: adjacent t
Jan 1, 1884
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Vanishing Interest of the Student Engineer in Coal MiningBy Newell Alford
AT its meeting in the fall of 1937, the Executive Committee of the Coal Division considered the growing scarcity of young engineers entering coal mining with serious intentions. This scarcity was the
Jan 1, 1938
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Sodium Carbonate From Natural Sources In The United StatesBy Julien F. Phillips, Donald E. Garrett
The production of soda ash from natural sources is one of the United States' oldest industries. The London Company, which financed the settlement of Jamestown, in the fall of 1608 exported in its
Jan 1, 1960
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The Dehydrating Oil Plant of Nevada Petroleum Co., CaliforniaBy S. J. Hardison
IN the fall of 1912, the appearance of water in the oil of the Nevada Petroleum Co., Coalinga, Cal., made necessary the installation of a dehydrating plant to reduce the water below the 3 per cent. li
Jan 3, 1915
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A Dynamic Simulation Model Of The Iron Blast FurnaceBy Eric L. Christiansen
A dynamic simulation model for the iron blast furnace has been developed which predicts flow rates, compositions, and temperatures of the top gas, slag, and hot metal exit streams as a function of tim
Jan 1, 1984
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Industrial Minerals - Kaolin Production and Treatment in the SouthBy Paul M. Tyler
YEAR after year, the kaolin industry of the United States has been setting new production records and making better products. High-grade paper, pottery, and rubber clays are produced in this country m
Jan 1, 1951