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  • AIME
    St. Louis Paper - Palmerton Zinc Refractories (with Discussion)

    By C. P. Fiske

    The pottery of the New Jersey Zinc Co. (of Pa.) is equipped to make three classes of refractories; namely, spelter vessels, spelter condensers, and high-grade fire-brick. The most important of these a

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    Paper - Magnetic Methods - Magnetometric Investigation of Gold Placer Deposits near Golden, Colorado

    By C. A. Heiland, W. H. Courtier

    The investigations described were made on a portion of Clear Creek basin near Golden, Colo. (-4 portion of the area under survey is shown in Fig. 1. The photograph was taken in the vicinity of station

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Papers - Refining - Anode-Furnace Practice - The Anode Department of the Noranda Smelter

    By W. B. Boggs, J. N. Anderson

    Originally, the copper produced at the Noranda smelter was shipped in the form of blister bars to the Laurel Hill refinery of the Nichols Copper CO, New York. In 1930 a refinery was built at Montreal

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Mechanism of Solidification and Segregation in a Low-carbon Rimming-steel Ingot (cae4f0f7-5313-4185-a47e-a6f9b1c85135)

    By Anson Hayes

    THE quality of sheet and strip products made of rimming steel is closely related to the structure and chemistry of the ingots. The varia-tion in composition throughout the ingot, as affected by segreg

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Electric Blasting Practices Of The Tennessee Copper Company

    By R. G. Clay, C. F. Seaman

    THE mines of The Tennessee Copper Co. are in the Ducktown Basin, in southeastern Tennessee. The ore is a heavy sulphide consisting principally of chalcopyrite, pyrite and pyrrhotite and in places runn

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Venezuela during 1936

    By C. C. McDermond

    In reviewing petroleum development in Venezuela during the year 1936, it is well to bear in mind certain factors that affected progress, although not directly connected with the oil industry itself. A

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    St. Louis Paper - Oil-field Brines (with Discussion)

    By C. W. Washburne

    Recently, Messrs, Mills and Wells1 published a thorough chemical study of the waters associated with oil in parts of the Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia region. Many of their conclusions are of

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Nonmetallic Dispersions in Cobalt

    By E. F. Adkins, R. I. Jaffee, C. T. Sims

    The effect of oxide dispersions on mechanical proberties of cobalt and cobalt-base powder-metallurgy alloys was investigated. This study shows that oxide dispersions added to pure cobalt greatly imp

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Steel for Aircraft Construction (with Discussion)

    By Edward Adarns Richardson

    As developed up to the end of the Great War, an airplane was essentially a mechanism of wood and fabric, joined and held together by metal fittings and fastening. The engine and accessories, wire for

  • AIME
    Stress Control Methods: Quantitative Approach to Stabilizing Mine Openings in Weak Ground

    By Shosei Serata

    Stress control methods of mining have been developed separately in at least four different parts of the world in entirely different types of mining -- coal, trona, salt and potash -- during the decade

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Refining Control - Technological Control of Refining Processes (with Discussion)

    By E. B. Phillips, A. E. Miller

    The title assigned to this paper permits a discussion of one of the most interesting chapters in the history of the American petroleum industry. Nature was kind to man when she prepared crude oil for

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Stabilization - Review of Developments at Kettleman Hills (With Discussion)

    By C. P. Watson, R. E. Collom

    Various chapters already written in the history of development of the North Dome of Kettleman Hills are monotonoysly identical in the one underlying' theme of conservation of oil and gas. Discove

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Coal Strengthens Its Position

    By Robert L. Frantz

    Progress and improvement continue to be the bywords of a dynamic coal industry. The industry continues to gain strength and expand its horizons in the face of competition from atomic energy and the pr

    Jan 2, 1969

  • AIME
    Principles of Sulfide Mineral Flotation

    By John Rogers

    The goal of a detailed quantitative understanding of the variables insulfide flotation in terms of established, or new, scientific principles is still distant, although there has been a good beginning

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Kinetics of the Eutectoid Transformation in Alloys of Iron and Nitrogen

    By B. N. Bose, M. F. Hawk

    SINCE Davenport and Bain' introduced the isothermal transformation technique for the study of austenite decomposition in steels, a new field of investigation has opened up. Extensive research has

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Geology and Non-Metallics - Mining and Preparation of St. Peter Sandstone in Arkansas (with Discussion)

    By D. D. Dunkin

    Sandstone has been prepared for glassmaking purposes, and marketed from the White River Valley in Arkansas at Guion, Izard County, since about 1910—soon after the completion of the White River Branch

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    The Rise and Decadence of Goldfield

    By Percy Barbour

    The town of Goldfield, Nevada, with the exception of six stone buildings, was burned to the ground to-day. One man is dead from causes attributed to the fire. A woman is missing and is believed to hav

    Jan 8, 1923

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Cementing Oil and Gas Wells (with Discussion)

    By I. N. Knapp

    I Herewith present some notes on the use of Portland cement to cement in the casing, and for plugging, to exclude water from oil and gas wells, and the methods employed. I have used my best efforts to

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    Papers - Properties of Metals - Expansion Properties of Low-expansion Fe-Ni-Co Alloys (With Discussion)

    By Howard Scott

    Invar is the preeminent low-expansion metal by virtue of the fact that it can be prepared with a zero coefficient of expansion at atmospheric temperature. This fact suggests that there is little room

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Hardenability Factors for Hypereutectoid Low-Alloy Steels

    By D. J. Carney, R. R. Burt, E. J. Whittenberger

    Hardenability (multiplying) factors for carbon, mongonese, silicon, chromium, nickel, and molybdenum have been developed for hypereutectoid low-alloy steels in which bainite is the first subcritical t

    Jan 1, 1957