Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
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
-
Air Blasts In The Polar Gold Field, India-DiscussionDiscussion of the paper of E. S. Moore, presented at the Colorado meeting, Sep-tember, 1918, and printed in Bulletin No. 135, March, 1918, p. 687. W. F. SMEETH, * Bangalore, Mysore, India (written di
Jan 10, 1918
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Comminution Exposure Constant by the Third TheoryBy Fred C. Bond
IN crushing and grinding the larger particles are more exposed to the work input. They absorb most of the work and protect the smaller neighboring particles from destructive contact with the crushing
Jan 1, 1958
-
The Relation Of Sulphides To Water Level In MexicoBy P. K. Lucke
ONE of the interesting features connected with the great continental uplift, which formed the table land of Mexico, is the great depth to which oxidation and secondary enrichment of orebOdies occurred
Jan 6, 1918
-
Simulation of the Brenda Mines Ltd. Secondary Crushing PlantBy C. C. Hatch, A. L. Mular
The methodology employed to develop a digital simulation of the Brenda Mines Ltd., Peachland, B. C., secondary crushing plant is described. Methodology includes data acquisition, data adjustment, mode
Jan 1, 1983
-
Maintenance Considerations in the Design of a New PlantBy John W. Rushton
What role does maintenance play in the design of a new mineral processing facility? Consider the fact that most new plants never reach design capacity the first year-or the second, third, or fourt
Jan 3, 1978
-
Chicago, Ill Paper - The Blake System of Fine CrushingBy Theodore A. Blake
More than a quarter of a century has passed since the introduction of the machine known as the Blake crusher, the invention of Eli W. Blake, of New Haven, Conn. Although originally designed for bre
Jan 1, 1885
-
San Francisco Paper - The Black-Mountain Coal-District, KentuckyBy J. B. Dilworth
The purpose of this paper is, first, to give a general account of a little-known coal-district of SE. Kentucky, its topography, drainage, and mineral resourcee, for those who may be interested in its
Jan 1, 1913
-
Geophysical-Geological Study Of The São Pedro Area, BrazilBy Mark Malamphy
THE occurrence of outcrops of bituminous schists and sandstones impregnated with heavy asphaltic petroleum first directed attention to the Sao Pedro area as a possible source of commercial production
Jan 1, 1936
-
Influence Of Foreign Uranium On The United States MarketBy T. A. Boyden
The Free World uranium market is now characterized by production nearly twice that of consumption result- ing in a rapid build-up of uranium inventories. Low- cost production from high-grade deposits
Jan 1, 1982
-
Petroleum Economics - The Economics of Overdevelopment (T. P. 1084)By John D. Gill
The purpose of this paper is to invite attention away from the obvious. direct monetary costs of oil-field overdevelopment (as distinguished from "social costs") to a consideration of the role played
Jan 1, 1940
-
Petroleum Economics - The Economics of Overdevelopment (T. P. 1084)By John D. Gill
The purpose of this paper is to invite attention away from the obvious. direct monetary costs of oil-field overdevelopment (as distinguished from "social costs") to a consideration of the role played
Jan 1, 1940
-
Halifax Paper - The Specific Gravity of Low-Carbon SteelBy George S. Miller
Now that low-carbon steel is manufactured successfully in large quantities by the Bessemer process, and threatens to displace wroughtiron for nearly all purposes, it becomes interesting to find how it
Jan 1, 1886
-
New York Paper - Petroleum in the Philippines (with Discussion)By W. D. Smith
It has been 5 years since the writer left the Philippine Islands and while in that country his chief work did not lie in this field, though he has visited all but one of the localities mentioned in th
Jan 1, 1921
-
Behavior Of Molybdenum As Resistor In The Electric FurnaceBy Henry J. Miller, Marcella Lindeman
DURING some experiments made by Henry J. Miller, partly in Germany and partly in the United States, in which it was found necessary to melt metals in quantities up to 60 kg. in a vacuum or under low p
Jan 1, 1928
-
California Paper - Reminiscences of the Early Anthracite-Iron IndustryBy Samuel Thomas
The specimen of anthracite coal which I hold in my hand, insignificant as it may appear to the casual observer, speaks volumes to me and to the initiated, as it suggests and represents the entire evol
Jan 1, 1900
-
Alpha Phase Boundary Of The Copper-Nickel-Tin SystemBy A. J. Phillips, C. G. Grant, Wm. B. Price
ADMIRALTY nickel is a new corrosion-resisting and heat-resisting white metal alloy composed of 70 per cent. copper, 29 per cent. nickel and 1 per cent. tin. It has been given the trade name "Adnic." I
Jan 1, 1928
-
Zinc Dust As A Precipitant In The Cyanide ProcessBy W. J. Sharwood
IN the cyanide process, gold and silver are dissolved from crushed ore as double alkali-metal cyanides, from which they may he precipitated by such positive metals as sodium (amalgam), aluminum, or zi
Jan 9, 1917
-
Buffalo Paper - The Chlorinati6n of Low-Grade Auriferous SulphidesBy William B. Phillips
It would be hard to find a mineral region that has been more beset with " processes" for the extraction of gold from auriferous sulphides than North Carolina. And it would be hard to find a mineral re
Jan 1, 1889
-
Mexican Paper - The Cyanide-Assay for Copper (Discussion, 1027)By Harry Huntington Miller
In spite of its recognized irregularities, the cyanide-assay for copper has always been popular among volumetric methods, being easy and rapid, and reasonably accurate when the solution tested contain
Jan 1, 1902