218 resultados para Montana Bureau of Mines
Resumo:
The object of this research was to produce a workable electrolytic cell for the continuous deposition of manganese from aqueous sulphate solutions and determine the critical factors in its operation.
Resumo:
The smelting of complex lead ores is a difficult operation, especially when they contain considerable amounts of iron and zinc. When these ores are smelted, all of the zinc, which is valuable and well worth recovering, goes into the slag. With the advent of the flotation processes, and the ability of these processes to concentrate the lead and zinc minerals into separate products, the smelting of complex lead ores was to a great extent simplified.
Resumo:
The field of archaeology and that of metallurgy appear to be widely separated and in no way related. Work done in recent years, however, tends to show that, in many ways, the metallurgist can supplement and enhance the information gained by the archaeologist, at least in regard to those objects which have been made of metal.
Resumo:
This investigation, carried on in the metallurgical laboratories at the Montana School of Mines, was undertaken with the desire to work out a rapid method for the estimation, or the determination, of the amount of lead in zinc.
Resumo:
The production of metallic manganese by electrolysis is of potential value for the recovery of this strategic metal from domestic deposits. These deposits are largely unsuitable for the production of ferromanganese, but they are amenable to low-cost leaching processes.
Resumo:
This paper is a report of a geological survey made of an area of approximately fifty square miles lying Northeast of Whitehall, Montana, in the region of the Golden Sunlight Mine. The survey was made by a field party consisting of twenty-three members of the senior class of the Montana School of Mines.
Resumo:
In this issue...Main Hall, Coach McAuliffe, State Bureau of Mines, Butte, Montana, Emmet Cullity, smelter, zinc, Moulton mine
Resumo:
In this issue...Debate Team, K. C. Gym, Constitution, John F. Rickards, Coach McAuliffe, Mines Basketball, Bureau of Mines, Butte, Montana
Resumo:
In this issue...Dr. C. H. Clapp, Montana State Bureau of Mines, poetry, Al's Photo Shop, Butte, Montana, Intercollegiate Track Meet, Normal College
Resumo:
A determination of the solubility of zinc ethyl xanthate was attempted by measuring the refractive index of a saturated solution of that salt. The small increment in refractive index effected by adding zinc ethyl xanthate to water in saturation quantities rendered measurements difficult and of dubious accuracy.
Resumo:
This report has been compiled from the data collected during the September, 1947, geologic field trip of the Montana School of Mines. The trip, under the direction of Dr. E. S. Perry, consisted of two weeks of field mapping and observation near Whitehall, Montana, and one week at the Montana School of Mines preparing this report.
Resumo:
In 1947, out of the 100,000 long tons of tin consumed in the United States, 25,000 tons went into solder. Tin plate took 39,000 tons while babbit, bronze and collapsible tubes accounted for approximately 17,000 tons. Solder ranked second to tin plate and required more than the next three major uses combined.
Resumo:
In this issue...US Bureau of Land Management, Koehler Stout, Denver Post, President Kennedy, Anaconda Company, American Society of Metals, Metals Bank
Resumo:
In this issue...Enrollment, Intramural Football, Homecoming, US Bureau of Mines, Vietnam, Sierra Club, Conoco, Butte Business Machines, Martha Nadeau, Cheerleaders
Resumo:
Magnesium and magnesium alloys are becoming more and more important in modern industry. Their use in the aviation industry has been greatly curtailed because of their comparatively poor resistance to corrosion especially in moist atmospheres. Many methods have been adopted to improve their resistance to corrosion.