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IC 6127 Survey Of Cracking Plants January 1, 1929By G. R. Hopkins
According to reports received by the United States Bureau of Mines, Department of Commerce, as of January 1, 1929, there were 2,205 cracking units completed or being built in the United States, with a
Jan 1, 1929
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OFR-46-84 Development Of A Phase Difference Of Arrival Technique For Location Of Trapped MinesBy W. G. Hopkins
The development of systems for location of miners who have become entrapped following a mine disaster has been one of the major research goals in the Bureau of Mines. This study details the preliminar
Jan 1, 2011
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IC 6197 Mining Laws of PortugalBy John W. Frey
This paper presents one of a series of digests of foreign mining legis- lation and court decisions which is being prepared in advance of a general re- port relative to the rights of American citizens
Nov 1, 1929
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RI 4412 Investigation Of Black Mountain Beryl Deposit, Oxford County, MaineBy E. E. Maillot
In 1943, diamond drilling by the Bureau of Mines, comprising 11 holes which totaled 1,295.6 feet, showed that the pegmatite at Black Mountain consisted of shallow lenses in interbedded biotite-quartz-
Jan 1, 1949
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RI 5814 Spectrochemical Analysis Of High-Purity Tungsten ? SummaryBy R. W. Lewis
The Federal Bureau of Mines Boulder City Metallurgy Research Laboratory conducted experiments in order to develop a spectrochemical method for determining the concentrations of impurities In high-puri
Jan 1, 1961
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RI 7092 Changes In Breaking Strength Of Model Rock Pillars Resulting From End ConstraintBy Clarence O. Babcock
Model pillars of limestone, marble, sandstone, and granite having length to diameter ratios of 3:1, 2:1, 1:1, and 0.5:1 were broken in axial compression to determine whether lateral end constraint aff
Jan 1, 1968
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RI 6642 Internal Friction As A Function Of Orientation In Magnesium Single CrystalsBy R. R. Nothdurft
The internal friction of eight single crystals of magnesium with orienta-tion ranging from 10° to 84° was measured at 33.5 kc and 272° C, and the results were interpreted in terms of the pinned-disloc
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 4113 Gallatin Corundum Deposits, Gallatin Co., Mont.By Robert D. O'Brien
"INTRODUCTION The Miscellaneous Minerals Division of the War Production Board requested the Bureau of Mines to investigate the Gallatin corundum property as a possible source of corundum, which was in
Aug 1, 1947
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RI 3026 A Survey Of The Sulphur Content of Commercial Motor Fuels 1930 (b843a880-65eb-4896-b525-1d2b7bf646ba)By A. J. Kraemer
"During the past several years a great deal of discussion has centered around the question of the permissible limit of sulphur content in fuels for automotive and aviation motors. Under certain condit
Jun 1, 1930
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RI 8465 Well Engineering and Sampling Variables in the Evaluation of GeobrinesBy W. D. Riley
The U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, has been conducting minerals recovery research in support of the nation's geothermal program since 1974. The Bureau's program of laborat
Jan 1, 1980
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RI 4730 Operation Of Pilot Plant For Reducing Zinc Concentrates With Methane GasBy R. D. Van Zant
The method for smelting zinc in horizontal retorts developed several centuries ago is still in use. This process consists essentially of the reduction of zinc oxide by carbon at 1,200° to 1,400° C. in
Jan 1, 1950
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RI 2307 SilicaBy Raymond B. Ladoo
Silica , or silicon dioxide , ( Si0, ) , occurs in a free state chiefly as quartz , but hydrous silica ( amorphous silica carrying a variable amount of combined water , 2 to 13 per cent ) , occurs as
Jan 1, 1922
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RI 6375 Some Physical Properties of Ceria Powders Derived From Five SaltsBy Roy L. Wilfong, LeRoy R. Furlong, Louis P. Domingues
The bulk and apparent densities , particle size , and surface area of ceria powders derived from the ammonium sulfate , carbonate , nitrate , oxalate , and sulfate salts and heated at 950 ° to 1,500 °
Jan 1, 1964
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RI 2212 The Work of the Ceramic Station of the Bureau of Mines at Columbus, Ohio, in Behalf of the Ceramic IndustryThe Work of the Ceramic Station of the Bureau of Mines at Columbus, Ohio, in Behalf of the Ceramic Industry"By Dorsey A. Lyon
"The ceramic industry of the United States has a total yearly manufactured product of nearly half a billion dollars, despite large foreign importation.After careful investigation of the industry by th
Feb 1, 1921
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Overview of Proven Low Cost and High Efficiency Dust Control Strategies for Mining OperationsBy J. M. Mutmansky, R. A. Jankowski, M. A. K. Mohamed
"SYNOPSISKnown health hazards associated with the breathing of respirable dusts, particularly silica dust, during mining are becoming a great concern in many parts of the world. The search for effecti
Jan 1, 1998
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OFR-72-92 Materials Flow Of Zinc In The United States 1850-1990By James H. Jolly
Although zinc in the environment is generally considered to be beneficial or benign, excessive amounts can cause deterioration of environmental quality and toxicity problems for some plants and animal
Jan 1, 1992
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RI 8492 Uranium Ion Exchange From Low-Grade Acidic Solutions in a Fluidized SystemBy G. R. Palmer
Using a fluidized, countercurrent multiple-compartment ion-exchange (MCIX) column previously developed by the Bureau of Mines, Bureau researchers have successfully extracted uranium from a simulated a
Jan 1, 1980
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IC 6988 Trends In Sales Of Memorial StoneBy Oliver Bowles
From the most remote periods of civilization, stone Las been used to perpetuate the memory of individuals or to immortalize their noble achievements. Ancient memorials ranged from simple piles of ston
Jan 1, 1938
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IC 8347 An Analysis Of 44 Recent Fatal Accidents With Front-End LoadersBy R. O. Pynnonen
This publication is an analysis of reports to the Bureau of Mines of 44 fatal accidents that occurred during the operation of rubber-tired, front-end loaders in the mineral industry. The causes of the
Jan 1, 1967
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RI 6446 Thermodynamic Data for Columbium (Niobium) CarbideBy K. K. Kelley, L. B. Pankratz, W. W. Weller
The heat capacity of columbium (niobium) carbide (CbC ) was measured over the temperature range from 51 ° to 298 ° K, and the entropy at 298.15° K was evaluated . Also , the heat content above 298.15
Jan 1, 1964