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  • AIME
    The New "Crime" of Silver: Who?s Guilty? ? Producers Hold They Should Receive the Monetary Price, $1.29; Consumers Argue for Free Open Market as an Industrial Metal ? The Producers? Side

    By Pat McCarran

    WHEN this Government was founded, the framers of the Constitution wrote into that instrument a provision that Congress should "coin money and fix the value thereof;" and the Constitution prohibits mak

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Technical Notes - Particle-Size Analysis: Sedimentation Methods

    By G. W. Phelps

    The field of industrial minerals is concerned with both sieve size and distribution of sub-sieve particles. A great deal of work has been reported on the techniques designed to provide information of

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Pennsylvania Hotel, New York, to Be Headquarters for Annual Meeting of the Institute, Feb. 15-19

    By AIME

    NEW YORK'S largest hotel, the Pennsylvania, will be filled with mining and oil men and metallurgists the third week of February when some 3000 AIME members, their wives, and guests will gather fo

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Mining and Milling Utah Rock Asphalt

    By R. C. FLEMING

    MINING rock asphalt for use as a paving material is an industry which has grown with the spread of the good roads movement. "Mineral Industry During 1930" reports asphaltic pavements constructed, incl

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Gold Stocks Not Alarming

    By AIME AIME

    EDWIN W. KEMMERER, professor of international finance at Princeton, in a speech before a banking conference at Urbana, Ill., on Nov. 26, stated that the increase in the store of gold held by the Unite

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Improved Outlook for Gold and Silver

    By Scott, Turner

    IN 1933, the monetary metals were produced in a ratio of 6.7 oz. of silver to 1 oz. of gold, the lowest relatively for silver since the period from 1851 to 1865. At the beginning of that period, the v

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    A Portable Assay-Outfit For Field-Work.

    By S. K. Bradford

    (Pittsburg Meeting, March, 1910.) FOR years past I have traveled in quest of promising mining-properties, over almost impassable mountain-trails to remote places in the mining-regions, usually, many

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Manganese as a Nonferrous Metal (823e69d5-87d2-451e-9729-b39c4ffc64c5)

    By Reginald S., Dean

    The commercial availability of electrolytic manganese has greatly changed the position of manganese as a nonferrous alloying metal. Manganese metal commercially available up to about ten years ago was

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Is Silver a Commodity?

    By TSUYEE PEI

    I FEEL greatly honored and appreciate this opportunity to be able to say a few words about that rather perplexing subject, silver. The constant decline in the price of this metal has now reached the

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Oil And Gas Developments In Arkansas in 1945

    By D. K. MACKAY

    The production of oil and gas in Arkansas is confined to two distinct and widely separated regions of the state; namely: (1) South Arkansas in the Gulf coastal plain, where 49 fields-many containing t

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Papers - Age-hardening - Some Developments in High-temperature Alloys in the Nickel-cobalt-iron System (With Discussion)

    By G. P. Halliwell, C. R. Austin

    The investigation described in this paper deals with the development of high-temperature alloys of the Konel series over a considerable period of time at t,he Research Laboratories of the Westinghouse

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Biographical Notice Of Samuel Franklin Emmons.

    By George F. Becker

    (San Francisco Meeting, October, 1911.) A MERE record of Emmons's professional career would very inadequately represent the man. That he was eminent we know, and our successors will realize in d

    Sep 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Cleaning- Bituminous Coal

    By J. R. Campbell

    THE need for standardizing methods of arriving at definite conclusions regarding the cleanability of a given coal, and for measuring the performance of coal-cleaning equipment, is constantly increasin

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Progress in Furnace Refractories

    By John D. Sullivan

    A DISCUSSION of the developments of the past decade in the field of refractories, and the effect of these developments on the performance and life of open-hearth furnaces, is perhaps best introduced b

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Spokane Paper - The Assay and Valuation of Gold-Bullion

    By Frederic P. Dewey

    The Bureau of the Mint of the United States Treasury maintains 13 ofEces for the purchase of gold-bullion, and this paper describes an investigation to establish the reasonable differences in the assa

    Jan 1, 1910

  • AIME
    Preparing and Recording Samples for Use in Technical Assay-Laboratories

    By Louis D. Huntoon

    AFTER the completion, in 1905, of the Hammond Mining and Metallurgical Laboratory of the Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University, it became necessary to secure and assay a large assortment of ore

    Nov 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Nonmetallic Inclusions (8152b893-62a3-4fc3-b322-c57b584e00d0)

    THE solid nonmetallic inclusions present to some extent in all commercial steels have been variously designated. In early references they were usually called slag inclusions, and this terminology is s

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Analysis Of Risk Sharing

    By C. Richard Tinsley

    INTRODUCTION The economic analysis (Chapter 3), the engineering studies (Chapter 10), the credit structure (and the consequential funding sources) - Chapter 11, and the overall feasibility structur

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    The Effect of Silver on the chlorination and Brornination of Gold

    By H. O. Hofman

    WHEN dry chlorine gas is made to act in the cold upon finely¬divided gold,' it converts the latter with evolution of heat into auro-auric chloride, Au2CI4, a hard, dark-red, hygroscopic salt. Moi

    Mar 1, 1905

  • AIME
    U.S. Bureau of Mines Preliminary Report

    A record $19.7 billion in minerals was produced by United States industries in 1963. This was some $800 million above the previous high established in 1962. Preliminary statistics compiled by the U.S.

    Jan 2, 1964