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The Northeast Tripp Slide - A 11.7 Million Cubic Meter Wedge Failure at Kennecott's Nevada Mine Division
By Victor J. Miller
The Northeast Tripp Slide is one of the larger slope failures that can be attributed to open pit mining. It is a 11.7 million cubic meter (15.3 x l0 6 yd3) wedge failure created by two thick gouge-fil
Jan 1, 1983
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Magcobar - Mud Is Their Business - Supply Of Vital Drilling Fluid Depends On Mining Operation
By Tommy Wilson
OIL well drilling fluids have become a vital part of the drilling industry during the past 25 years. From chance usage of drilling mud at the fabulous Splindletop field in 1901, drilling fluid control
Jan 5, 1954
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Part VI – June 1969 - Papers - Mechanical Properties of BORSIC® Aluminum Composites
By M. Marciano, K. Kreider
Silicon carbide coated boron fiber (Borsic) reinforced aluminum composites were made which exhibit strength and modulus values predicted by the rule of mixtures. A successful technique for fabricating
Jan 1, 1970
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The Electric-Air Drill
By William L. Saunders
MANY members of the Institute, who participated in the visit made, during the Bethlehem meeting of February, 1906, to the shops of the Ingersoll-Rand Company, at Phillipsburg, N. J., inspected with in
Jan 9, 1907
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Nonferrous Physical Metallurgy
By Albert J. Phillips
SEVERAL important changes have been' made during 1933 in the compilation and distribution of technical literature to those interested in nonferrous physical metallurgy. The Institute of Metals, o
Jan 1, 1934
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The Engineer's Relation to Finance
By Lucius W. Mayer
WHILE the mind of the financier does not normally run along channels similar to those of his technical adviser, engineers, because of their exactness, are ever more called upon to manage affairs where
Jan 1, 1924
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What's New in Mining Safety
By J. J. Forbes
Probably the newest thing in mining safety, or safety for mines, is the apparent dissatisfaction on the part of the mineral industries, as represented by both management and labor, and the general pub
Jan 1, 1949
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Kramer Borax Deposit in California and the Development of Other Borate Ores
By Roy G. Mead
BECAUSE of its magnitude, and the type of occurrence, the deposit of boron minerals in the Kramer district, Kern County, California, is unlike any other in the world. Discovery of this vast deposit ha
Jan 1, 1933
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Mining Methods and Ore Estimations at the Hog Mountain Mine
By N. O. Johnson
THE Hog Mountain mine is a pyritic-gold property in the north central part of Tallapoosa County, Alabama, at an elevation of 800 ft. in the southern Appalachian region. It is 13 miles by a good second
Jan 1, 1937
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Institute of Metals Division - Zinc-Rich Corner of the Zn-Fe-Al System
By E. H. Rennhack
Phase equilibria of the zinc-rich portion of the Zn-Fe-A1 system containing up to 20.0 wt pct Fe and Al have been investigated at 600°C (1112°F), 450°C (842°F), and room temperature by metallographic
Jan 1, 1962
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The Ever New West
By George Otis Smith
WHAT American can enter this Western empire without his imagination being stirred by the stories of its past-yes, and even more by visions of its future! Whether we travel by rail or by auto, our path
Jan 1, 1926
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Minnesota's Iron Mining Industry
By AIME AIME
APROXIMATELY one third of the world's iron ore is mined in the United States; and about 80 per cent of this third is mined in the Lake Superior ore region, and about 60 per cent in Minnesota. Th
Jan 1, 1941
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Some New Trends Seen as the Oil Industry Attacks Its Wartime Economic Problems
By Norman D. Fitzgerald
IN 1943 the petroleum industry completed a series of practical adjustments to the acute problems which dominated the scene a year earlier. The crisis in petroleum transportation from the Gulf Coast to
Jan 1, 1944
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Iron Blast-Furnace Slag Becomes Important Constructional Material
By W. H. Caruthers
ECONOMIC utilization of all by-products has long been the goal of American industry. One of the first groups that was popularly supposed to have achieved its aim was the meat-packing industry, which r
Jan 1, 1940
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Americanization Methods at Coal Metal Mines
By Robert Linton
M ETHODS by which Americanization is developed among the foreign workers at the mines in the United States, with particular reference to mines of the Pennsylvania coal region, were discussed in a most
Jan 1, 1921
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5. Geology of the Friedensville Zinc Mine, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania
By William H. Hallahan
The Friedensville zinc mine of The New Jersey Zinc Company is located about four miles south of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania in the Saucon Valley, an infolded and down faulted block of Cambro-Ordovician ca
Jan 1, 1968
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Colorado Paper - The Iron Ores of the Middle James River
By Persifor Frazer
At a time when all those interested in the iron trade are carefully scanning the horizon for new sources of the raw material, a few words concerning a field, which though not new, has not been hithert
Jan 1, 1883
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The Metallurgical Value of the Lignites of the Far West
By A. M. E. Eilers
No one who has visited our Western mining districts, and studied the economical part of the beneficiation of the ores occurring all over that vast extent of country, can underrate the high importance
Jan 1, 1873
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Progress Notes on the Iron-silicon Equilibrium Diagram
By Bradley Stoughton
As a part of the systematic study of the alloys of iron under the auspices of the Engineering Foundation, and preliminary to the commencement of comprehensive work on this larger subject, the authors
Jan 1, 1930
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Environment-Land
By Shawn T. Sorrell, Carl Hrovatic
Original by Carl Hrovatic and Shawn T. Sorrell Revised by Carl Hrovatic Land is a precious resource and should be treated as such by all members of our society. The soil covering this earth is only a
Jan 1, 1981