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Books > Professional & Technical > Other technologies > Mining technology & engineering
The Gulf Drilling Series is a joint project between Gulf Publishing
Company and the International Association of Drilling Contractors.
This first text in the Gulf Drilling Series presents casing design
and mechanics in a concise, two-part format. The first part focuses
on basic casing design and instructs engineers and engineering
students how to design a safe casing string. The second part covers
more advanced material and special problems in casing design in a
user-friendly format. Learn how to select sizes and setting depths
to achieve well objectives, determine casing loads for design
purposes, design casing properties to meet burst, collapse and
tensile strength requirements and conduct casing running operations
safely and successfully.
In 1923, Kansas governor Johnathan Davis traveled to Hutchinson to
dedicate Emerson Careyas new rock salt mine whose shaft provided
access to an ancient salt bed 650 feet under the earthas surface.
The Carey Salt Mine, advertised as athe most modern in the world, a
served as a companion to Careyas already-existing evaporation
plants. Miners used the newest technology to blast and crush the
mineral into gravel and haul it to the surface to provide rock salt
for livestock, industries, and roads. Throughout the 20th century,
thousands visited Careyas mining operations. Ever since the day
Governor Davis presided over the opening ceremony, the Carey Salt
Mine has served as a landmark for Hutchinson and helped shape its
identity as athe Salt City.a
Seismic While Drilling: Fundamentals of Drill-Bit Seismic for
Exploration, 2nd edition, revised and extended gives a theoretical
and practical introduction to seismic while drilling by using
drill-bit noise. While drilling seismic methods using surface
sources and downhole receivers are also analysed. The goal is to
support the exploration geology with geophysical control of
drilling, and to build a bridge between geophysicists involved in
seismic while drilling, drillers and exploration geologists. This
revised and extended edition includes new topics such as novel
drilling technology, downhole communication, ground-force drill-bit
measurement, SWD seismic interferometry, and fiber optic (DAS). A
new section is dedicated to well placement and geosteering. Like
the first edition, Seismic While Drilling, 2nd edition also
includes examples of SWD analysis and application on real data.
Theory and Technology of Multiscale Dispersed Particle Gel for
in-depth Profile Control systematically introduces concepts
surrounding preparation principles and methods of DPG particles.
The whole preparation process can be divided into two major stages:
bulk gel crosslinking reaction period and DPG particle preparation
period. The effects of bulk gel strength, shearing time, shearing
rate and bulk gel-water ratio on PDPG particles are also
systematically analyzed. Zirconium bulk gel, phenolic resin bulk
gel, and organic-inorganic cross-linked bulk gel with short
gelation time on the ground are introduced, along with gelation
properties, gelation influencing factors, thermal stability and
applicable conditions. This book systematically describes the
theory and technology of multiscale dispersed particle gel which
shows promise as an acceptable alternative to conventional water
technologies needed for enhanced oil recovery in high water cut
mature oilfields.
While the histories of gold, silver, and copper mining and smelting
are well studied, lead has not received much scholarly attention
despite a long history of both Native American and European desire
for the ore. Over time, native peoples made lead ornaments in
molds; French and American settlers used lead to form musket balls;
red lead became an important production element for flint and
crystal production; and white lead was used in making paint until
the mid-twentieth century. Gray Gold aims to broaden understandings
of early colonial and Native American history by turning attention
to the ways that mining-and its scientific, technological,
economic, cultural, and environmental features-shaped intercultural
interactions and developments in the New World. Backed by
remarkable original sources such as firsthand mining accounts,
letters, and surveys, Mark Chambers's study demonstrates how early
mining techniques affected the culture clash between Native
Americans and Europeans all the while tracking the impact increased
mining had on the environment of what would become the states of
Illinois and Missouri. Chambers traces the evolution of lead mining
and smelting technology through pre-contact America, to the
amalgamation of aboriginal processes with French colonial
development, through Spain's short occupation to the Louisiana
Purchase and ultimately the technology transfer from Europe to an
efficient and year-round standard of practice after American
assumption. Additionally, while slavery in early American industry
has been touched on in iron manufacturing and coal mining
scholarship, the lead mining context sheds new light on the history
of that grievous institution. Gray Gold adds significantly to the
understanding of lead mining and the economic and industrial
history of the United States. Chambers makes important
contributions to the fields of United States history, Native
American and frontier history, mining and environmental history,
and the history of science and technology.
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