Index - Abstracts of Papers Published by the Institute during 1932

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
44
File Size:
2532 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1932

Abstract

On the following pages are abstracts of papers published by the Institute during the year 1932 as Technical Publications, Preprints, in bound volumes and in Mining and Metallurgy. For abstracts of papers that appear in bound volumes in 1932 but that were published as Technical Publications in 1930 or 1931, see the Transactions for those years. Papers that appear in this volume are not abstracted here. Many of the Technical Publications have been reprinted in bound volumes. Information regarding this disposition, and number of pages in each paper, may be found in the list beginning on page 309. Volume numbers are given as listed on page 3 and in the paragraph at the beginning of the index, page 315. The abstracts are grouped as follows: Page Page Metal Mining.................... 265 ferrous Alloys)................. 279 Milling and Concentration......... 268 Coal Division.................... 287 Iron and Steel Division............ 270 Petroleum Division............... 292 Nonferrous Metallurgy (Reduction Nonmetallic Minerals............. 299 of Ores)....................... 277 Mining Geology.................. 301 Rare Minerals and Metals......... 279 Mining Administration (Accounting, Institute of Metals Division (Found- Taxation, Industrial Relations). . 304 ing and Metallography of Non- Geophysical Prospecting........... 304 Metal Mining The Mineral Industry. By Scott Turner. (Min. & Met., June, 265. 3500 words.) Abstract of an address delivered before the Royal Canadian Institute, Toronto, April 16, briefly outlining the importance of mining in the United States, in Canada, and in the world. Comparison is made of the mineral production for 1886, 1900, 1910, 1920 and 1929, showing that in the 43 years from 1886 to 1929 that of the world increased nearly tenfold, of the United States over twelvefold and of Canada thirtyfold, but that Canada's output was equivalent to only 2 per cent of the world total and to 5 per cent of that of the United States in 1929. Statistical tables and graphs show value of production, percentage of world production contributed by Canada and the United States, etc. The mining situation in Canada is briefly reviewed: only those American engineers who have had occasion to examine the figures appreciate the rapidity of growth of Canadian mineral production. The treatment of minerals involves vast complex industries. When we are producing, say, 6 billion annually, the employment of 2 million workers provides indirect support to perhaps 10 million people. Exploiting mineral deposits is peculiar in certain ways, for the deposits are exhaustible, are of rare occurrence when measured in terms of outcrop area compared to total earth area, and may suddenly be handicapped or superseded by new discoveries; moreover, the economic position of the contained metals is 'affected by the use of scrap metal and the existence of invisible stocks. The largest and most valuable of the mineral deposits are not the metals, but rather the fuels. The record of the coal industry in recent years is one of brilliant technical achievement; its economic position is far from satisfactory. A so-called world fuel
Citation

APA:  (1932)  Index - Abstracts of Papers Published by the Institute during 1932

MLA: Index - Abstracts of Papers Published by the Institute during 1932. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1932.

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