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  • AIME
    147th Meeting of the Institute - More Than 2100 People, a New Record, Renew Old Friendship and Discuss 200 Papers

    By AIME AIME

    CERTAINLY in point of attendance, and doubtless in several other ways as well, the 147th meeting of the A.I.M.E. was the best ever held. In times of depression, mining engineers and metallurgists have

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Experimental Observations Concerning the Collapse of Dislocation Loops During Annealing

    By Jack Washburn

    The c axis indentations in zinc crystals were shown to undergo 100 pct strain recovery on heating. The mode of deformation and the details of the polygonization and collapse of indentations were found

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Dislocation Substructure and the Deformation of Polycrystalline Beryllium

    By W. Bonfield

    A study has been made of the dislocation substructures produced in hot-pressed beryllium specimens strained to various levels in the range from 800 x 10-6 In. pev in. to fracture. A number of distinct

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    The Electrolytic Zinc Plant Of Ruhr-Zinc GMBH., Datteln, West Germany

    By H. R. Wuthrich

    The Metallgesellschaft AG decided in late 1965 to build an Electrolytic Zinc Plant at Datteln (W. Germany). Lurgi-Chemie was entrusted with the engineering and erection of the entire plant. Ground was

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    In The Aggregate - The Party's Over: A Rambling Discourse On Suspended Contempt, The Bittersweet Boom, And Other Heresies

    By Lawrence F. Rooney

    One of Edgar Allan Poe's stories that haunts my subconscious is the Masque of the Red Death. These days, whenever I join a group like this, especially during the cocktail parties, I see myself an

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    7. Mineral Exploration and Development in Maine

    By Robert S. Young

    During the last quarter-century, exploration for metallic deposits in Maine has been sporadic with peaks generally coinciding with periods of high metal prices. Known cases of regional or semi-regiona

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Physical Chemistry Of High-Temperature Reactions

    OF the many categories into which scientific knowledge has been arbitrarily divided, the one that has proved most applicable in our attempts to gain an insight into the details of steelmaking processe

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Geophysical Prospecting in 1930

    By Donald H. McLaughlin

    ZEST in the search for new supplies of metallic ores and petroleum is difficult to maintain with stocks of raw materials accumulating and with over- production rightly or wrongly blamed for most of ou

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Pure Zinc-Its Preparation and Some Examples of Influence of Minor Constituents

    By E. C. Truesdale

    A FEW years ago H. M. Cyr, working in the Research Laboratories of The New Jersey Zinc Co., produced a few pounds of zinc1 of such purity that no other elements were detected in it by spectrographic a

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Slime-Filtration

    By George J. Young

    (San Francisco meeting, October, 1911.) THE nature of slimes handled in the treatment of gold- and silver-ores has been discussed in technical literature to a considerable extent. The subject of slim

    Nov 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Who’s Who in Mineral Engineering – 1972 SME Membership Directory

    SME Membership Directory Listings of record March 31, 1072 SOCIETY OF MINING ENGINEERS OF AIME

    Jan 7, 1972

  • AIME
    Mineral Pigments

    By Kenneth R. Hancock

    Iron oxides are unique in that they are the only significant colored mineral found in a natural state suitable for use as a pigment after it has been pulverized to pigmentary size. The current world p

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Activated Alumina and Some Metallurgical Applications

    By Charles Hardy

    ACTIVATED alumina is an aluminous material which may be 1 classified chemically as a partially dehydrated aluminum trihydrate having a high porosity and a perma¬nent physical structure. In general, it

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    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

  • AIME
    World's Longest Oil Pipe Line, Calcutta to Kunming, China ? Though Not as Large as America's "Big Inch? It Was Vital to Successful Fighting in the East

    By AIME AIME

    NAPOLEON'S dictum that an Army travels on its stomach has not changed in this present war, but the things an Army's stomach calls for would be more than strange to Napoleon. Today one of the

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    "The Economics of Enhanced Oil Recovery and its Position Relative to Synfuel s "

    By Charles W. Perry

    The options of enhanced oil recovery, coal syncrude, and shale syncrude are compared by approximately equivalent economics. The physical constraints for the major enhanced oil recovery processes are d

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    First Copper Reverberatory Conference

    By AIME AIME

    WITH the example of the steel open-hearth men and their round table conference before the copper men, the query naturally arose "Why cannot we do likewise?" The advantage of pooling and comparing know

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    The Variable Mining Curricula

    By Francis A. Thomson

    DO the curricula of our mineral technology schools prepare their graduates to meet properly the full range of their responsibilities in after life? An unequivocal "no" could be returned to this questi

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Observations of Creep of the Grain Boundary in High Purity Aluminum

    By H. C. Chang, N. J. Grant

    REEP studies and measurements in most in-V> stances are based on a relatively gross gage length. Even in some recent theoretical studies on the mechanism of creep, changes were followed by means of X-

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - The Limitations of the Gold Stamp-Mill (See Discussion p. 545)

    By T. A. Rickard

    MILLING is one of the metallurgical arts whereby the extraction of the largest possible proportion of the value in an ore is effected at the least possible expense. Stamp-milling* is that particular p

    Jan 1, 1894