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  • AIME
    Titanium - A Growing Industry - War-Born U. S. Production Has Good Chance to Survive Postwar Competition

    By OTTO HERRES

    TITANIUM is estimated to be the ninth most plentiful element, ranking after iron, aluminum, and magnesium, and ahead of copper, lead, and zinc. Vast quantities of titanium are widespread throughout th

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Lake Superior Paper - Mine-Water Neutralizing Plant at Calumet Mine (with Discussion)

    By L. D. Tracy

    On Aug. 5 and 6,1918, and Mar. 26, 1919, the writer made an investigation of the mine-water neutralizing plant at the Calumet mine of the H. C. Frick Coke Co. The object of this plant is to develop a

    Jan 1, 1922

  • AIME
  • AIME
  • AIME
    World Developments in Electrolytic Zinc

    By Arthur Zentner

    THE essentials of the electrolytic zinc process, as now used in commercial plants, date back to work done by Letrange in 1881. He used sulfuric acid to leach roasted sulfide and ,oxide ores, purified

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Iron Blast-Furnace Slag Becomes Important Constructional Material

    By W. H. Caruthers

    ECONOMIC utilization of all by-products has long been the goal of American industry. One of the first groups that was popularly supposed to have achieved its aim was the meat-packing industry, which r

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Siting For Aggregate Production In New England

    By William R. Barton

    It is generally conceded as axiomatic that the aggregate producer and the average urban resident have mutually incompatible goals. The producer wants to be near his mass market and the average residen

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Thursday Morning Session, April 25, 1940 - Minutes

    By Open-Hearth Steel

    We have a very high-powered organization up here this morning, headed by Kenneth C. McCutcheon, general superintendent of the Ashland Division of the American Rolling Mill Company, and L. A. Lambing,

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Capital Requirements of Crude Oil Production - Sharp Upward Trend Seen Both in Total Costs and Per Barrel Produced

    By Joseph E. Pogue

    FOR a number of years the petroleum department of The Chase National Bank has been making a continuing study of the financial aspects of thirty oil companies. (See Pogue and Coqueron, "Financial Analy

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Gold in the Juratrias of Southwestern Colorado

    By Edward H. Bzirdick

    THE territory under particular consideration in this article comprises portions of La Plata and Montezuma Counties, situated in the southwestern corner of Colorado, and around the base of the La Plata

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Petroleum Production - Foreign - Russian Oil Fields 1927 and 1928

    By Basil B. Zavoico

    The production of all Russian fields incressed from approsimatctly 74,000,000 bbl. during 1926-27, to approximately 83,000,000 bbl. during 1927-28. Of this amount Baku was responsible for 54,.500,000

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
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    The Classification of Coals

    By Marius R. Campbell

    VARIOUS classes of coals are recognized in this country at the present time. These classes depend largely upon physical characteristics rather than upon chemical composition, and consequently they can

    Sep 1, 1905

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Mining, Milling, And Processing Of Perlite

    By Fred D. Gustafson

    With the postwar emergency for new housing and for new industrial buildings, much research has been done on lightweight aggregates for use in concrete and plaster. The trend toward lighter weight aggr

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Coal's Prospects Under the NRA Code

    By A. T. Shurick

    THE NRA Administrator's casual reference to the coal code as the next "pineapple" to be fixed was a conservative estimate of his job. This thorny and adamantine morsel now looms as a critical tes

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Magnesium: Reviewing Its Technology of Production and Use

    By John A. Gann

    WITHIN a very few years magnesium has sprung from oblivion, from classification as a technically unknown, little appreciated, and expensive material to front-page importance in many fields of engineer

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Mining and Preparation of Eastern Molding Sands

    By R. M. Bird

    FEW persons outside of the foundry trade have any conception of the great variety of sands now regularly specified and furnished, nor of the differences in foundry practice frequently resulting from a

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Important Mining Methods Reviewed

    By Scott Turner

    PRESIDENT SCOTT TURNER officiated as chairman of the opening session on mining methods, Monday morning, Feb. 15. The first paper was that of Max H. Barber on open-pit mining in the Lake Superior distr

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Part VIII – August 1969 – Communications - Convective Flow in Tin

    By F. Weinberg, L. MacAulay

    DAVIS,' in an investigation of solute redistribution along molten rods of dilute silver in tin, concluded that at horizontal temperature gradients below approximately 5°C per cm very little conve

    Jan 1, 1970