three natural resources, except that they had learned from daily observations that waterwas essential for the utility of soil and agriculture. Floods ...
try. Before World War I, an industrial plant could tap the natural flow of any reasonably small stream in the l nited states and obtain an ample supply of good ...
Water and forests Industrial Wastes. Harold R. Murdock. Ind. Eng. Chem. , 1950, 42 (8), pp 81Aâ82A. DOI: 10.1021/ie50488a049. Publication Date: August 1950.
Oct 6, 2008 - Note: In lieu of an abstract, this is the article's first page. Free first page. Partners. Atypon. Chorus · Cope publication ethics · Project Counter.
In the last decade and prior to the industrial depression, the widespread studies of the United States Public Health Service, particularly at the experiment station ...
Bui-oui·: the atomic bomb arrived, few persons, if any, realized that difficult radioactive waste disposal problems were on the horizon. Today we face such prol>-.
by W. B. Hart, Pantech, Inc. A Case History of a Refinery Waste. Wastes from a mid-continent refinery are treated in two stagesâby flotation and by ponding to ...
waste waters for disposal in receiving streams bff IInmill ... little concern for public ... wastes. After removal of thesteel parts from the molten cyanide, the parts arc.
Packing House Wastes INDUSTRIAL WASTES. Harold R. Murdock. Ind. Eng. Chem. , 1953, 45 (6), pp 103Aâ105A. DOI: 10.1021/ie50522a011. Publication ...
than 2 p.p.m. of phenols. He also knew that his company's research laboratories had studied extensively the ozone-phenols reactions. He sug- gested that the ...
Grab sample of mill heads,. Idaho. From a tungsten mine, Alaska. 0.32. 0.43. 0.37. 0.40. 3. 3.25. 3.06. 3.15. 3.11. 4. From a tungsten mine, Alaska. 5.97. 5.80.