Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Metallurgy of Zinc - Practice Shows Numerous Small Improvements as Rapid Price Increase Brings Technologic Activity
By H. R. Hanley
IN AS MUCH as the interesting changes in the economics of the zinc industry are covered nowhere else in this issue, and they are related to technological progress in the metallurgy of zinc, some refer
Jan 1, 1940
-
Engineers Necessary for Continued American Industrial Progress
By Donald B. Gillies
WE HAVE come a long way since the time of the old steel master who declared that chemistry would ultimately bring the steel business to ruin. Yet I sometimes doubt whether even now we fully recognize
Jan 1, 1940
-
Recent Progress in the Nonmetallics
By Oliver Bowles
STRIKING new developments in the field of industrial minerals include the employment of lime, salt, coal, and air for the manufacture of stockings, and the substitution of paper for granite and marble
Jan 1, 1940
-
What Has Made Possible the 15,000-ft. Oil Well?
By W. A. Eardley
FIFTEEN years ago the world's deepest oil well penetrated the earth about 7300 ft. That depth has now been more than doubled. Why has such deep drilling become necessary and how has it become pos
Jan 1, 1940
-
Nondestructive Inspection of Metals
By A. V. De Forest
INSPECTION and test methods of great diversity have been used from the most ancient times to select raw material, control its manufacture, and appraise its finished properties and value. The "miller t
Jan 1, 1940
-
Alaskan Platinum Development at Goodnews Bay Makes U. S. Platinum Production Important
By Winston W. Spencer
ALTHOUGH by far the largest A consumer of platinum metals in the world, the United States until recently has been in- significant as a producer. Writing in the "Minerals Yearbook" for 1939, H. W. Davi
Jan 1, 1940
-
Record Activity in the Illinois-Kentucky Fluorspar District - How the Mineral Was Found - What It Is Used For -Why the Industry Is Booming
By Sidney Snook
FLUORSPAR production is the most important industry in a compact area in southern Illinois and western Kentucky bordering the Ohio River. Producers' activities do not usually figure much in the m
Jan 1, 1940
-
The Coal Mining Industry - Production at Highest Level Since 1929 - Further Mechanization and Research Notable
By C. A. Gibbons
AFTER nine years of extremely de- pressed business, marked mostly A with red ink on the balance sheets of most coal companies and with an increasing internal competitive struggle for diminishing marke
Jan 1, 1940
-
Twenty Billions of American Gold: Is It a White Elephant?
By Oliver M. W. Sprague
THIS gold problem is full of complications and can hardly be handled adequately or comprehensively in any short period of time. Perhaps I might begin by mentioning a few aspects of the subject about w
Jan 1, 1940
-
Progress in the Technology of Oil Production
By F. B. Plummer
PERHAPS the greatest progress made in the technical methods of oil production during the last year has been in handling gas from the new fields that yield light distillate fractions. At least sixteen
Jan 1, 1940
-
Metallurgy of Copper - New Nevada Con. Smelter Now Operating
By P. D. I. Honeyman
IN THE Southwestern copper region the event of greatest interest was the starting up of the new Hurley, N. Mex., smelter of the Chino Mines division of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Corp., which occu
Jan 1, 1940
-
South America as a Source of Strategic Minerals
By Charles Will Wright
Brief descriptions of the occurrence of the various deposits of strategic minerals then known in South America are published in "The Mineral Deposits of South America," by B. L. Miller and J. T. Singe
Jan 1, 1940
-
Geophysical Exploration - Less Seismic Work - Use of Gravimeter Increases - Various Techniques Perfected
By Sherwin F. Kelly
THE geophysical scene shifts and alters, the emphasis changes, and new possibilities loom, but the tendency is always towards widening the field and deepening the analytical penetration. Seismic metho
Jan 1, 1940
-
Mineral Industry Education - American Colleges Are Not Only Turning Out Good Engineers But Good Citizens - Accrediting Completed
By Francis A. Thomson
IN reviewing mineral industry education a year ago, occasion was taken to congratulate the Institute in general and to felicitate the Education Di- vision in particular on "the most gratifying growth
Jan 1, 1940
-
Manufactured Gas and Coke Afford Opportunity for Expanding Coal Production
By A. M. Beebee
IN the present century the coal and manufactured gas industries have been eclipsed in public interest by oil, natural gas, and hydro- electric energy, which have had the benefit of rapid development a
Jan 1, 1940
-
Mining Geology - Fields of the Economic Geologists Widen and Their Technique Improves
By Donald McLaughlin
INCREASING variety of interests among mining geologists is becoming more and more marked, as the frontier of their science and of its applications continues to expand. Each of the traditional lines of
Jan 1, 1940
-
Aviation in Mining - V-Type Motors, Use of Plastics, Seen in Latest Airplane Construction
By W. E. STOKES
A GENERAL extension and appreciation of the stereocartographic principle of precise mapmaking is evident. Under the stimulus of war, many radical improvements in aerial photography, and in airplane an
Jan 1, 1940
-
-
Subsurface Dip and Strike Determined by New Polar Core Orientation
By E. Ray Webb
A interest to geologists and to mining and petroleum engineers is a laboratory method for determining the dip and strike of sub- surface structures, as well as the direction of fault planes traversing
Jan 1, 1940
-
Edmund Merriman Wise - Chairman, Institute of Metals Division, A.I.M.E.
By AIME AIME
NOT a few physical metallurgists started their profession- al careers as chemists or physicists, only to surrender later to the attractions of metallurgy. The present Institute of Metals Chairman vari
Jan 1, 1940