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San Juan

New York San Francisco Washington, O.C. Auckiand BogoU Caracas Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Milan Montreal New Delhi San Juan Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto... [Pg.463]

Parameter Rio Arriba Terrell Stanton San Juan Olds Field, Chffside Field,... [Pg.170]

Proc. of 18th MTAFAR Congress, San Juan, Puerto Rico, Oct. 23-27, 1988. [Pg.166]

New Mexico s San Juan Gas Plant is one of the United States newest and largest natural gas liquids recovery plant. Commissioned in November 1986, its levels of productivity are high by industry standards. Located near Bloomfield, New Mexico, just south of tlie Colorado border, the plant is jointly owned by Conoco Inc. (then a subsidiary of the DuPont Company) and Tenneco Inc., both of Houston. It is operated by Conoco and is named after its location in the San Juan basin, an area of oil, gas, and coal production. [Pg.440]

The San Juan plant can process up to 500 MMcfd of gas, and extract 40,000 bbl of EPBC liquids. EPBC liquids include ethane (E), propane (P), butanes (B), and condensate (natural gasoline) products... [Pg.440]

J. A. Given, G. Stell. XVI International Workshop on Condensed Matter Theories, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 1992 (New York Plenum, 1993), pp. 395-410. [Pg.344]

San Juan Ixhuatepec, Mexico City, Mexico Series of BLEVEs at LPG Storage Facility... [Pg.35]

Pietersen (1988) describes the San Juan Ixhuatepec disaster. The storage site consisted of four spheres of LPG with a volume of 16(X) m (56,500 ft ) and two spheres with a volume of 2400 m (85,000 ft ). An additional 48 horizontal cylindrical tanks of various dimensions were present (Figure 2.24). At the time of the disaster, the total site inventory may have been approximately 11,000-12,000 m (390,000-420,000 ft ) of LPG. [Pg.35]

Pietersen, C. M. 1985. Analysis of the LPG incident in San Juan Ixhuatepec, Mexico City, 19 November 1984. Report TNO Division of Technology for Society, 1985. [Pg.245]

In this section, three examples of blast calculations of BLEVEs and pressure vessel bursts will be given. The first example is designed to illustrate the use of all three methods described in Section 6.3.2. The second is a continuation of sample problem 9.1.5, the BLEVE of a tank truck. A variation in the calculation method is presented instead of determination of the blast parameters at a given distance from the explosion, the distance is calculated at which a given overpressure is reached. The third example is a case study of a BLEVE in San Juan Ixhuatepec (Mexico City). [Pg.292]

In the United States, air and gas drilling techniques are used extensively in parts of the southwest in and around the San Juan Basin, in parts of the Permian Basin, in Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma, in Maryland, Virginia and parts of Tennessee. Internationally, oil and gas drilling operations are carried out with air and gas drilling techniques in parts of the Middle East, North Africa and in the Western Pacific. [Pg.840]

Zunyite has been found as isometric tetrahedra at the Zuni Mine, San Juan Co., Colorado, intimately mixed with guitermanite at Red Mountain, Ouray Co., Colorado, in an altered porphyrite and recently1) near Postmasburg, South Africa. Hillebrand assigned it the empirical formula H18Al16Si6 0, F, Cl)45, and Groth adopted the formula Al8Si30vi OH, F, Cl)12. The crystals are usually colorless and transparent, hardness 7, density 2.873—2.904. [Pg.542]

Barton, P.B. Jr., Bethke, P.M. and Roedder, E. (1977) Environment of ore deposition in the Creede mining district, San Juan Mountains. Colorado III. Progress toward interpretation of the chemistry of the ore-forming fluid for the OH vein. Econ. Geol, 72, 1-25. [Pg.268]

Cosgrove, K., Ellis, S., Al-Tikriti, M. et al. Assessment of the effects of chronic nicotine on P2-nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in nonhuman primate using [I-123]5-IA-85830 and SPECT. Paper presented at the 66th Annual Scientific Meeting of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence, 2004, San Juan, Puerto Rico. [Pg.48]

Hamilton, S.J. and K.J. Buhl. 1997. Hazard evaluation of inorganics, singly and in mixtures, to flannelmouth sucker Catostomus latipinnis in the San Juan River, New Mexico. Ecotoxicol. Environ. Safety 38 296-308. [Pg.1574]


See other pages where San Juan is mentioned: [Pg.5]    [Pg.285]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.899]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.222]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.76 ]




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Juanes

SANS

San Juan, Puerto Rico

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