Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Has the Coal Mining Industry an Adequate Technique - It Has Not, Concludes the Author, Who Makes a Severe Arraignment of Present Conditions Within the Industry, and Advises Engineering Analysis of Problems as the RemedyBy Eugene McAuliffe
THE last obtainable figures of the value of the coal mining investment are those contained in the U. S. Census Reports, from data gathered in 1919. The values shown therein and set forth below cover l
Jan 1, 1926
-
Drying Low-rank Coals in the Entrained and Fluidized StateBy V. F. Parry, J. B. Goodman
The low-rank coals containing 10 to 50 pet natural bed moisture represent over half of the tonnage reserve of the available solid fuels of the United States, but only about 2 pet of United States coal
Jan 1, 1949
-
Dry ConcentrationBy Kenneth K. Humphreys, Joseph W. Leonard, Robert L. Llewellyn, William C. McCulloch
INTRODUCTION The particular field of application of machines utilizing air currents as the primary separating medium is in the cleaning of the fine sizes of bituminous coal. Approximately 25,400,0
Jan 1, 1968
-
PART V - Papers - The Fatigue and Tensile Fracture of TD-NickelBy R. K. Ham, M. L. Wayman
TD-Nickel has been broken in tension and in fatigue at voom temperature. Rod specimens failed in tension by necking, with axial cracks attributed to voids elongated in the extrusion direction. Fatigue
Jan 1, 1968
-
-
The Constitution of Mattes Produced in Copper-SmeltingBy R. C. Philp, Allan Gibb
INTRODUCTION. THE term matte is applied to smelting-products so extremely diverse in composition and physical properties that it appears impossible to devise any generic formula to represent, chemica
Nov 1, 1905
-
Comparative Tests on Drill-Steel BreakageBy S. S. Clarke
ABOUT two years ago some of my friends were discussing the amount of drill-steel breakage that was permissible or not excessive, per month, per rock ton, per ton of steel or any unit of measure or out
Jan 1, 1933
-
-
Florida Paper - The Equipment of Mining and Metallurgical LaboratoriesBy H. O. Hofman
The mining and metallurgical laboratory, as we understand the term in this country, is a place .in which mechanical and chemical working-tests are made on ores, fuels and furnacematerials. It is of qu
Jan 1, 1896
-
Chicago Paper - Experimental Investigations on the " Loss of Head" of Air-Currents in Underground WorkingBy D. Murgue
The circulation of air in underground workings is subject to a gradual and continuous reduction of its pressure, from intake to outlet, caused by the friction between it and the more or less rough and
Jan 1, 1894
-
Ore-Deposits Near Igneous ContactsBy Walter Harvey Weed
CONTENTS. [ ] INTRODUCTION. THIS paper deals with certain ore-deposits whose structural features or mineral contents (or both) result, directly or indirectly, from igneous intrusions and their
Jan 1, 1913
-
Cleveland Paper - Notes on Ruff’s Carbon-Iron Equilibrium Diagram (with Discussion)By Henry M. Rowe
Professor Ruff's most illuminating paper' describing his extremely valuable investigation of the carbon-iron equilibrium diagram assigns definite temperatures to certain very important lines
Jan 1, 1913
-
The Roles of Stress Wave and Gas Pressure in Pre-splittingBy Herbert K. Kutter
This paper is concerned with the physical phenomena in the fracture process of presplitting and only indirectly with the establishment of the optimum presplitting parameters. Its nature is therefore q
Jan 1, 1968
-
Minerals ProcessingBy Howard Evans
Moderate but substantive gains were recorded in 1972 in the minerals processing industry. In the area of mill design, a number of large plants under construction during the past two to three years wer
Jan 2, 1973
-
Electric Motors Versus Compressed-Air Engines For Driving Deep-Mine HoistsBy K. A. Pauly
(Wilkes-Barre Meeting, June, 1911.) COMPRESSED air has been and is still very extensively used in connection with mining-operations, but its application in the past has been almost entirely confined
Dec 1, 1911
-
Annual Review – Beneficiation Moves ForwardBy Stanley D. Michaelson, Norman Weiss
This was a year of realization. Some years are for planning and development, some for designing and building, others for fulfillment. With greater hopes and plans for the future than ever before, the
Jan 3, 1955
-
Student Associates (99d5b086-8ec8-4a07-831c-0e79f43056b5)Aalde, Kaare, (S'40) Box 827, Socorro, N. M. Aase, Glenn D., (S'40) Engr. Experiment Sta., Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. Abadesco, Enrique A., (S'39) Student. College of Engrg
Jan 1, 1942
-
A Re-Evaluation Of The Origin And Diagenesis Of Borate Deposits, Death Valley Region, CaliforniaBy Charles E. Barker
Jan 1, 1985
-
Magnesium Alloys - A Study of Factors Influencing Grain Size in Magnesium Alloys and a Carbon Inoculation Method for Grain Refinement (Metals Technology, June 1945) (With discussion)By C. H. Mahoney, A. L. Tarr, P. E. Le Grand
Magnesium, it is now generally realized, differs in some important aspects from most other structural metals, not excepting even its close neighbors, the aluminum-base alloys. This is particularly tru
Jan 1, 1945
-
CommitteesExecutive A R LEDUC, Chairman ARTHUR S DWIGHT R V NORRIS EDWIN LUDLOW E L DEGOLYER Membership J V W REYNDERS, Chairman E L DEGOLYER R M RAYMOND EDGAR RICKARD W Y WESTERVELT Finance WALTER H A
Jan 1, 1923