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  2. Tungsten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tungsten

    The strategic value of tungsten came to notice in the early 20th century. British authorities acted in 1912 to free the Carrock mine from the German owned Cumbrian Mining Company and, during World War I, restrict German access elsewhere. [53] In World War II, tungsten played a more significant role in background political dealings.

  3. Wolfram Crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfram_Crisis

    The Wolfram Crisis (Spanish: Crisis del wolframio) was a diplomatic conflict during World War II between Francoist Spain and the Allied powers, which sought to block Spanish exports of tungsten ore to Nazi Germany. "Wolfram" is an alternate name for tungsten, a strategic material used in anti-tank weapons and machine tools.

  4. Wolframite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolframite

    Wolframite is highly valued as the main source of the metal tungsten, a strong and very dense material with a high melting temperature used for electric filaments and armor-piercing ammunition, as well as hard tungsten carbide machine tools. During World War II, wolframite mines were a strategic asset, due to its use in munitions and tools. [13]

  5. Kinetic bombardment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinetic_bombardment

    Set in the Cold War, the story is based on the use of (relatively inexpensive) information-based "intelligent" systems to overcome an enemy's numerical advantage. The orbital kinetic bombardment system is used first to destroy the Soviet tank armies that have invaded Europe and then to take out Soviet ICBM silos prior to a nuclear strike.

  6. Sangdong mine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sangdong_mine

    Sangdong Mine had been a main business station for tungsten concentrate production of Korea Tungsten Mining Co.Ltd ("KTMC") with large scale and high quality of Sangdong tungsten production (the principal potential products were tungsten and molybdenum) that was the driving force of South Korean economic development since post-Korean War. At ...

  7. Stibnite Mining District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stibnite_Mining_District

    From 1941 to 1945, Stibnite mined and milled more tungsten and antimony than any other mine in the United States. During this wartime period Stibnite produced 40 percent of the nation's domestic supply of tungsten and 90 percent of its antimony. [4] After World War II, operations at the site slowed down and many miners moved out of the area.

  8. The hottest new crypto trend: What is the Tungsten Cube? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/what-is-the-tungsten-cube-trend...

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  9. Ferrotungsten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrotungsten

    Ferrotungsten is relatively expensive, with the prices around $31–44 per kilogram of contained tungsten. [4] During World War 2, over 21,000,000 lb of Ferro-tungsten and other ferroalloys were shipped to Russia on lend-lease. [3] The cost was more than $12,000,000. Ferrotungsten comes from rich ore raw materials primarily of wolframite or ...