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Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp. - Improvements In Plant And Operations At Pueblo Coal Washery
By J. D. Price, W. M. Bertholf
THE central washing plant of the Colorado Fuel & Iron Corp. was first operated in 1918 to furnish coal for two 60-oven batteries of Koppers design. Prior to that time the coke for the blast furnaces h
Jan 12, 1954
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Why Young Miners and Metallurgists Should Join the A.I.M.E.
By AIME AIME
DURING my senior year at college a professor said to his class that a student who failed to obtain a passing grade in that certain subject could not graduate with his class and that his diploma would
Jan 1, 1936
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Young Engineers After the War ? How Older Members of the A.I.M.E. Can Assist the Next Generation
By Donald B. Gillies
PROBABLY the most critical and difficult period in an engineer's career is that between the completion of his college work and his attainment of professional recognition and accepted status in th
Jan 1, 1945
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Opportunities for Mining Engineers
By Thomas T. Read
AT this time of the year, engineering schools are releasing a group of young men who probably are, on the average, in much the same attitude of mind as a person arriving at the terminal station of a r
Jan 1, 1926
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Hard Alloys Go Underground ? Tungsten Carbide Insert Bits - a Revolutionary Development in Rock Drilling
By Sheldon P. Wimpfen
EVERYWHERE in mining circles the talk is of this new development of hard faced or insert bits which hints of many changes to come in mining practice and rock drill equipment. In the past fifteen years
Jan 1, 1947
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Calculation Of The Depth Of A Magnetic Deposit
By Janshi Sen
VERTICAL-INTENSITY magnetometers, such as the Hotchkiss Superdip and the Askania vertical field balance, are now [ ] widely used, because vertical-intensity charts give definite information for the
Jan 1, 1944
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Agglomeration Of Fine Materials.
By WALTER S.
(New York Meeting, February, 1912,) THE earliest example of attempting to form finely-divided materials into larger masses for better adaptation to commercial use was probably the briquetting of peat
May 1, 1912
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Magnetic Anomalies and Igneous Rocks
By Mark Malamphy
MOST igneous rocks, and particularly those of the basic type, con-tain relatively high percentages of magnetite and other iron oxides, which give them moderately high magnetic susceptibilities and mak
Jan 1, 1936
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Papers - Solubility of Oxygen in Solid Cobalt, and the Upper Transformation Point of the Metal
By C. H. Mathewson, A. U. Seybolt
As is well known, many questions affecting the properties and uses of a metal cannot be answered without careful consideration of the state of purity realized in the various operations of preparation,
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Solubility of Oxygen in Solid Cobalt, and the Upper Transformation Point of the Metal
By A. U. Seybolt, C. H. Mathewson
As is well known, many questions affecting the properties and uses of a metal cannot be answered without careful consideration of the state of purity realized in the various operations of preparation,
Jan 1, 1935
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The Methane Detector as an Aid to Mine Safety
By Arthur Glance
MINE safety is of the utmost importance to all operators and most operations have a safety organization, or safety inspector, whose job it is to be continually on the alert to detect and correct the h
Jan 1, 1936
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Rubber-Tired End-Loaders Replace Crawler Units In Eagle-Picher's Illinois-Wisconsin Mines
By Robert L. Haffner
When mining operations of The Eagle-Picher Co. began in the Illinois-Wisconsin zinc mining field in 1949, all underground loading of broken ore and waste was by caterpillar-tracked machines. Beginning
Jan 6, 1962
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The U.V.X., A Mining Adventure
In the history of American mining, so far as I know, there is no cleaner, brighter, or more completely successful mining adventure than that of the United Verde Extension.* It deserves to be placed on
Jan 1, 1932
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Effect Of Mold Thickness And Cooling On Base Quality Of Intermediate Size Ingots
By George Breyer
DURING the past 25 years the steelmaker has experienced some difficulty in producing steel to meet the standards established by the metallurgist. In contrast to the past, when a chemical specification
Jan 1, 1947
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Papers - An X-ray Study of the Iron-palladium and Nickel-palladium Systems (T. P. 1047)
By Ralph Hultgren
Few phase diagrams of alloys composed of two transition metals have been adequately studied, probably because of the high melting points involved. Transition metals are the elements that have inner sh
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - An X-ray Study of the Iron-palladium and Nickel-palladium Systems (T. P. 1047)
By Ralph Hultgren
Few phase diagrams of alloys composed of two transition metals have been adequately studied, probably because of the high melting points involved. Transition metals are the elements that have inner sh
Jan 1, 1939
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Production Engineering - Encroachment of Edge Water at Santa Fe Springs (With Discussion)
By Donald K. Weaver
Eight different oil zones have been identified and produced at Santa Fe Springs, of which three or four are in turn divided into two or three parts. These zones, from top to bottom, are the Foix, B
Jan 1, 1931
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Technical Note - Brief Description And Evaluation Of The Magnesite Flotation Processes - Development Of A New Flotation Process
By G. E. Karantzavelos
A novel two-stage froth flotation process for the recovery of pure magnesite from low grade ores is described. The process consists of a first-stage, magnesite flotation step where a rougher magnesite
Jan 1, 1985
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New Board Organizes
By W. H. Bassett
W H. BASSETT was elected first vice-president at . the executive session of the new Board on Tues- day afternoon. Karl Eilers, H. Foster Bain, Thomas T. Read, and H. A. Maloney were respectively re-el
Jan 1, 1929
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Chemical Control in Copper Reduction
By AIME AIME
A MODERN copper reduction works has both a genera1 chemical laboratory for control work and a research laboratory for the study of improvement of present processes and better working-up of by-products
Jan 1, 1929