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  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Petroleum Developments in California during 1930

    By B. E. Parsons

    Curtailment of production of crude oil, to the extent of effecting an approximate balance in supply and demand, was a problem confronting the oil industry in California throughout the year 1930. At th

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Pressing Complicated Shapes From Iron Powders

    By Claus G. Goetzel

    PRESSING of powdered metal parts is best done in the direction of the shortest extension of the piece, to avoid too great a loss of pressing force through internal [ ] friction. As long as curved s

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Gasification By The Moving-Burden Technique

    By J. W. R. Rayner

    THE conventional method of making water gas involves individual plants for the separate carbonization of coal to coke and the subsequent gasification of coke with steam. The process demands lump cok

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Effect of Particle Size on Flotation

    By A. M. Gaudin

    UNTIL recently little attention has been paid to the effect of particle size on flotation. This has been especially true of material finer than 200 mesh.1 Particles of different sizes must behave diff

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Amenia Paper - Missing Ores of Iron

    By Persifor Frazer

    It has been the aim of the writer, by measuring his base line on the territory of theoretical chemistry, to attempt to fix by triangula tion certain points within the domain of mineralogy. As the b

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Collector Coatings In Soap Flotation

    By Nathaniel Arbiter, Arthur F. Taggart

    THE fact that the floatability of minerals with fatty-acid collectors changes as the pH of a pulp varies was utilized in the early days of flotation, when sulphuric acid was used with oleic acid to fl

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Papers - Preferred Orientation in Rolled Magnesium and Magnesium Alloys (T.P. 1355, with discussion)

    By P. W. Bakarian

    Previous determinationl,2,3 of the texture of magnesium and its alloys have shown only slight variations in the principal features of the structure. This investigation presents pole figures for magnes

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Theoretical Metallurgy - Thermodynamic Study of the Equilibrium of the Systems Antinomy-bismuth and Antimony-lead

    By Yap Chu-Phay

    Although chronologically the Sb-Bi system was the first one studied by the writer, the theoretical basis of the equations used in this paper is fully discussed in the writer's paper on the iron-c

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Philadelphia Paper - The Formation of Gold Nuggets and Placer Deposits

    By T. Egleston

    The origin of gold both in placer deposits ancl in veins, and especially the origin of nuggets, has been the subject of repctated discussions and investigations, which have been recently brought to my

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Colorado Paper - Limonite Deposits of Mayaguez Mesa, Porto Rico

    By C. R. Fettke, Bela Hubbard

    During the summer of 1916, while on a visit to the United States Agricultural Experiment Station at Mayaguez, Porto Rico, the writers were told by D. W. May, the director, that an occurrence of mangan

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Data about Labor Employed in Various Bituminous Mines (with Discussion)

    By Howard N. Eavenson

    The information contained in the following paper was collected at the request of the U. S. Coal Commission, and is published with the permission of that body and of the various companies furnishing th

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Notes On Homestake Metallurgy

    By Allan Clark

    (San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) IT is nearly three years since the metallurgy of the Homestake ore was discussed with considerable thoroughness, in a paper' read before the Institution

    Jan 7, 1915

  • AIME
    A Study Of Opaque Minerals In Trail Ridge, Florida Dune Sands

    By T. N. McVay, E. E. Creitz

    INTRODUCTION Object RATHER large amounts of titanium minerals and some zircon and monazite are being recovered from dune sands about 10 miles west of Jacksonville Beach, Fla. The Mining Branch o

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Size Effects in Quenching High-purity, Precipitation-hardenable Alloys

    By W. L. Finlay

    Size effects in quenching steel are particularly prominent and well recognized because of the existence of a critical cooling rate separating nuclea-tion and growth transformations, as exemplified by

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Shaft Sinking on the Gogebic Iron Range (4a5dcca5-f90a-46cc-a9ef-9316e4093447)

    By J. C. Sullivan, W. A. Knoll

    THE sinking of a new shaft at the Newport mine, Ironwood, Mich., was started in May 1931 and completed on Aug. 3, 1932. During this period, 2665 ft. of shaft in granite was completed, at an average ad

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Relations between Government Surveys and the Mining Industry - Service of the Surveys

    By George W. Bain

    The good work of the surveys supported by the different branches of the government needs little mention to geologists but is underappreciated by people at large. Geologists and engineers realize their

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Concentration - Flotation of Barite from Magnet Cove, Arkansas (Mining Technology, May 1941) (with discussion)

    By Benjamin S. Lindsey, James Norman

    Barite (BaSO4) is the most important industrial barium mineral from the standpoint of quantity consumed. In 1938 the amount was 365,000 tons. Its uses are numerous, some of the more important being in

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Local Section News (81d937f3-25b2-42ac-adbd-40ac90e3f758)

    MONTANA SECTION W. C. SIDERFIN, Chairman, OSCAR ROHN, Vice-Chairman, E. B. YOUNG, Secretary-Treasurer, 526, Hennesey Building, Butte, Mont. F. W. BACORN, C. D. DEMOND. The semi-annual meeting

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    Solubility Of Hydrogen In Molten Copper-Tin Alloys

    By Carl F. Floe, Michael B. Bever

    TRE solubility of hydrogen in molten copper-tin alloys is of both practical and theoretical interest. From a practical standpoint, data on the equilibrium solubility as a function of temperature, pres

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Grain Refinement of Steel Ingots by Solidification in a Moving Electromagnetic Field (Discussion)

    By C. Richard Honeycutt, Frederick C. Langenberg, Guenter Pestel

    Otto Schaaber (Institut für Harterei-Technik, Bremen-Schönebeck, Germany)— Langenberg, Pestel, and Honeycutt gave an interesting example of the grain refining effect nonstationary magnetic fields may

    Jan 1, 1962