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A Review of the Institute YearBy Samuel Taylor
IT is customary for the president of an engineering society, in his annual address, to describe either some engineering problem with which he has beer connected or to review the work of the society du
Jan 3, 1927
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8. Titaniferous Ores of the Sanford Lake District, New YorkBy Stanford O. Grodd
The Sanford Lake district encompasses an area covering 24 square miles in the central Adirondack Mountains of northern New York State. Discovery of the titaniferous magnetite deposits dates back to 18
Jan 1, 1968
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Cheap Bonneville Power Should Attract ElectrometallurgicaI IndustriesBy Walter W. R. May
FOR more than 25 years a few business men who represent virile private enterprise in the Pacific Northwest have been trying to awaken the community to the potential benefits of an open Columbia River.
Jan 1, 1940
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Part I – January 1969 - Papers - Thermodynamic Properties of Copper-Manganese AlloysBy M. J. Pool, with Appendix by Larry Kaufman, R. W. Krenzer
Thermodynmic properties of the Cu-Mn system have been deterrrzined in the temperature range 973" to 1273°K by measuring the vapor pressure of manganese in equilibrium with alloys of compositions varyi
Jan 1, 1970
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Anaconda's Berkeley Pit A Four-Part Report On Open Pit Mining Operations - Berkeley Pit History And GeologyBy Charles C. Goddard
Since discovery of silver-gold lode deposits in 1864, the Butte district has produced more than $2.25 billion worth of copper, zinc, manganese, silver, and gold, an unprecedented value in the mining w
Jan 3, 1959
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Fields of Kansas during 1943By W. A. Ver Wiebe
Spurred on by the very high demands for new crude supplies resulting from World War 11, the oil men of Kansas strained every effort in 1943 to find as many new pools as possible. In all, 1761 test wel
Jan 1, 1944
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Fields of Kansas during 1943By W. A. Ver Wiebe
Spurred on by the very high demands for new crude supplies resulting from World War 11, the oil men of Kansas strained every effort in 1943 to find as many new pools as possible. In all, 1761 test wel
Jan 1, 1944
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59. The Geology of the Iron King MineBy Arthur R. Still, Paul Gilmour
The ore deposit of the Iron King mine occurs in a group of steeply-dipping metamorphosed eugeosynclinal volcanic and sedimentary rocks of Precambrian age. Within this sequence, the ore deposit lies at
Jan 1, 1968
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Philadelphia, Pa. Paper - The Siemens Patents for Improvements in Glass-Furnaces, with Suggestions for their Use with Natural GasBy B. Silliman
THE remarkable outflow of natural gas recently developed in Western Pennsylvania, and along the valley of the Ohio and its tributaries, has called attention to an important series of patents for impro
Jan 1, 1885
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Latest Practice In Burning Cement And Lime In EuropeBy O. G. Lellep
IN every country economic circumstances prescribe the method used to produce a commodity at lowest cost. In Pennsylvania a man's wages for working 4 hr buys a ton of coal wholesale; in Germany a
Jan 7, 1954
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New York Paper - Potash as Byproduct from the Blast Furnace (with Discussion)By R. J. Wysor
Since the outbreak of the European war, few problems of raw-material supply have commanded more nation-wide attention than potash. It is well known that before the war the domestic production of potas
Jan 1, 1917
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Blow-Holes in Steel IngotsBy E. von Maltitz
IN his highly interesting paper on "Piping and Segregation in Steel Ingots,"1 Prof. Howe emphasizes the effect of successive phases of internal pressure in the ingot in the evolution of gas, and the
Sep 1, 1907
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Mineral Beneficiation: A PerspectiveBy Nathaniel Arbiter
There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceas'd, The which observ'd, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things. W. Shake
Jan 1, 1971
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Photoelasticity and Its Application to Mine-pillar and Tunnel ProblemsBy David Sinclair
THE dimensions and shapes of mine structures may at present be determined by (1) field experience, (2) structural calculations, and (3) barodynamic tests.§ None of these, however, provide information
Jan 1, 1940
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Institute of Metals Division - Metallurgy Behind the Decimal PointBy E. E. Schumacher
IN a laboratory devoted to the furtherance of the science of communication, the breadth and variety of the problems encountered are challenging to a metallurgist. In my own long association with the B
Jan 1, 1951
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Mining at ClimaxBy Henderson, Robert
A GOOD idea of the magnitude of the underground operations at Climax can be gained from the following figures. A little more than 43,000,000 tons has been drawn from the mine and of this amount, 40,50
Jan 1, 1946
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Members, Associates and Junior Members (229f966d-1d21-4fc9-829d-ab1c8cea508f)THOSE NOT MARKED ARE MEMBERS; MARKED THUS t ARE ASSOCIATES. HEAVY-FACED TYPE SIGNIFIES HONORARY MEMBERSHIP. JUNIOR MEMBERS ARE MARKED II. THE FIGURES AT THE END OF THE ADDRESS INDICATE THE YEAR OF ELE
Jan 1, 1917
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Dimensions And Changing Patterns Of Supply And DemandBy Richard H. Mote, W. C. Schroeder
The endlessly changing pattern of mineral supply and demand offers opportunity to the alert and can bring disaster to the unwary. The discovery of ore bodies, the invention of extractive processes, th
Jan 1, 1959
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New York Paper - Gold-Milling in the Black HillsBy H. O. Hofman
With the exception of the exhaustive paper on the Father de Smet mill, by its designer, Mr. A. J. Bowie, Jr. (Bans., x. 87), nothing, so far as the writer is aware, has as yet appeared on the stamp-mi
Jan 1, 1889
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A New MicromagnetometerBy Frank Rieber
THE discovery that strongly magnetic bodies localized near the surface of the earth could be detected by the distortion which they produced in the resultant magnetic field marked the beginning of magn
Jan 1, 1928