Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Behavior Of A Rigid Inclusion Stressmeter In An Anisotropic Stress FieldBy W. F. White, W. R. Beloff, B. C. Dorwart, G. W. Jaworski
INTRODUCTION The rigid inclusion stressmeter is a relatively low-cost instrument developed by Hawkes and Bailey (1973) and was originally intended to monitor stress changes in mine pillars subjecte
Jan 1, 1982
-
Stope in Malagash Salt Mine, Nova ScotiaBy AIME AIME
THE two illustrations below, furnished through the courtesy of J. P. Messervey, Deputy Inspector of Mines, Department of Public Works and Mines, Province of Nova Scotia, show a fourth-level stope in t
Jan 1, 1932
-
Spokane Paper - Cyaniding SlimeBy Mark R. Lamb
The various methods of treating pulp in air-agitation tanks offer problems for experiment and study which are fascinating as well as practical. The usual method heretofore has been to fill each tank i
Jan 1, 1910
-
Research in the Coal-mining Industry - DiscussionJ. J. RUTLEDGE,* McAlester, Okla. (written discussiont).-Research work has often a more immediate and practical application to the in-dustries than even the investigators themselves realize, but coal
Jan 11, 1919
-
Operations of the Warehouse Department - Close Checking and Running Inventory Holds Losses to a MinimumBy Albert Stazicker
AT Climax the warehouse department operates as an independent unit similar to the mine and mill departments. It has the responsibility of receiving, checking, unloading, and storing all material and s
Jan 1, 1946
-
Phosphor us in Bituminous Coal and CokeBy Andrew S. McCreath
THE manufacture of pig iron for conversion into steel by the Bessemer and open-hearth processes, is now one of the most important industries of the United States. It is necessary that iron intended fo
Jan 1, 1880
-
Minicomputers Used in Mineral Exploration, or Backpacking a Box Full of Bits into the BushBy Kenneth L. Zonge
Recently, extensive field use has been made of a digital minicomputer incorporated into a modified geophysical prospecting method. This is a generalized induced polarization (IP) system called complex
Jan 1, 1976
-
Hospitalities Extended To American Engineers In FranceThe following very cordial letter, addressed to the President of the American Institute of Mining Engineers by the President of the graduates of the School of Mines of Saint-Etienne, will he deeply ap
Jan 7, 1918
-
Research, Patents, and the Kilgore Bill ? Private Initiative in Research, With Patent Protection, a Proved Success in AmericaBy Anthony William Deller
MAJOR battles in the present war have been fought in American research laboratories. Without the outstanding contributions made by our scientists, engineers, and technologists in mining and metallurgy
Jan 1, 1945
-
Low Cost Centrifuge Versatile in Laboratory UseBy Earl L. H. Sackett
This laboratory centrifuge is unique in its low cost and ease of construction, its particular adaptability to problems encountered in an ore dressing laboratory and its simplicity of operation. It wil
Jan 4, 1950
-
Petroleum - Review of American Production (Summary; with Discussion)By F. Julius Fohs
A comparative balance sheet for 1924 and 1925 follows: 1925 1924 Barrels Barrels Gross production..................................... 763,000,000 714,000,000
Jan 1, 1927
-
Petroleum Engineering Education - Case Methods of Teaching Geology to EngineersBy C. W. Brown
In the author's experience and contact with engineering students the old form of recitations had grown into the lecture system in which the student was a passive receiver of digested material. La
Jan 1, 1929
-
The Pattern of ECA in Mineral AffairsBy C. H. Burgess
ON June 5, 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall in a speech at Harvard University outlined a plan for the economic recovery of Europe. The plan contemplated that the United States should provid
Jan 10, 1950
-
Young Mining Engineer in the Coal IndustryBy M. D. Cooper
UNDERGRADUATES in mining engineering may be prepared for work by giving them sound instruction in the courses generally considered essential to the profession. The industry is not deeply concerned abo
Jan 1, 1950
-
Pouring Concrete with a Pressure ChamberWHEN pouring concrete it frequently happens that space prohibits the placing of a mixer at the point, or points, where the concrete is to be used. Usually in such cases recourse is had to some form of
Jan 1, 1929
-
Milwaukee Paper - Engineering Work of the National Research CouncilBy Henry M. Howe
1. The purpose of the National Research Council as organized for war purposes is twofold, to stimulate those outside its own personnel to conduct researches of importance for winning the war and to ca
Jan 1, 1919
-
Rock In The Box - An Untapped ResourceBy John F. Abel
In Silver Plume, Colo., there is a bachelor miner who offers individualized tours of his mine, The Silver Cloud. It is an interesting tour because he drove the mine himself and the view from the shack
Jan 1, 1970
-
A National Spokesman for EngineersBy A. B. Stickney
UPWARDS of 200,000 engineers in this country are sufficiently interested in engineering as a profession to have joined a society, but not over 10% of them belong to any one society. There is a widely-
Jan 1, 1946
-
London Paper - Fluorite and Barite in TennesseeBy Thomas L. Watson
My thanks are due to Mr. Frank Firmstone, Easton, Pa., who has called my attention to the statement in my paper' that " Barite, fluorite and quartz, thougll not observed in the Tennessee area," .
Jan 1, 1907
-
A Study of the Silica RefractoriesBy J. Spotts McDowell
J. W. RICHARDS, So. Bethlehem, Pa.-The paper is certainly an exceedingly, valuable one and it gives detailed information which should be utilized in the following way. There are probably twenty differ
Jan 4, 1917