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  • AIME
    Biographical Notices - Hennen Jennings

    By W. R. Ingalls

    Jan 1, 1922

  • AIME
    Postwar Horizons for Aluminum - New Lightweight High-Strength Alloys and Alclad Sheets Likely to Widen Market Outlets Greatly

    By F. Keller

    SOME PHRASEMAKER has aptly said that nature made aluminum light but research made it strong. Research has been a vital element in the past progress of the aluminum industry and its future growth likew

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Objectives of Mineral Education

    By AIME AIME

    MEMBERS of the Engineering Education Committee held two meetings at Joplin preliminary to the opening of the main meeting there. The first was held on Sunday afternoon. It was attended by all who had

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Preliminary Announcement for Annual Meeting

    By AIME AIME

    THE 140th meeting of the Institute will be held in the Engineering societies Building, 'New York, Feb.: 16-19, and one of the most important features, one which cannot be reduced to text in the T

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Life at a Cyprus Copper Mine

    By Victor G. Hills

    CONTRARY to what seems to be the general impression, the island of Cyprus was not named for the metal copper, but the reverse was the case. The origin of the name is entirely lost. The ancient city Ki

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    The Rule of Capture

    By John M. Loveioy

    EVERY producer of crude oil knows what is meant by the Rule or Law of Capture. It means that the ultimate ownership of a migratory substance such as oil is not determined until that substance is reduc

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Plans for Coal Division Meeting

    By AIME AIME

    THE Coal Division holds its fall meeting in the Pocahontas coal field, at the West Virginian Hotel, Bluefield, W. Va., Oct. 9 and 10. The first day will be a busy one-two sessions for the presentation

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Biographical Notice Of Thomas Septimus Austin.

    By Arthur S. Dwight

    THE professional career of Thomas Septimus Austin, who died at El Paso, Tex., August 23, 1906, was contemporaneous with the growth of the silver-lead smelting-industry of the Far West, to which his ta

    Jan 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Occurrence, Origin, And Character Of The Surficial Iron-Ores Of Camaguey And Oriente Provinces, Cuba.

    By Arthur C. Spencer

    (Glen Summit Meeting, June, 1911.) THREE great deposits of iron-ore, in Camaguey and Oriente Provinces, Cuba, are well known to me through careful field-examinations executed in the years 1901 and 19

    Mar 1, 1911

  • AIME
    What's Ahead In Transportation

    By C. W. Robinson

    Transportation is the minerals business. Once upon a time the geologist, the engineer and later the metallurgist reigned supreme, but the leading role in mineral development today is the economist-esp

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Why Do Minerals Float?

    By S. Frederick Ravitz

    JUDGING from the inquiries that are constantly being received by the Utah Engineering Experiment Station as to the "Why," so to speak, of the flotation process of concentrating minerals, it occurred t

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Factors Affecting Investment in South American Mining - Peru

    By NEWTON B. KNOX

    PERU, lying south of Ecuador and having common frontiers with Brazil, Chile, and Bolivia, includes over a thousand miles of the Andean mountains. The coastal plain is arid and narrow and the Amazonian

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Substructure and Mechanical Properties of TD-Nickel

    By M. von Heimendahl, G. Thomas

    The microstructure of TD-Ni has been examined by transmission electron microscopy in the extruded, annealed. and deformed states. The tensile properties hove been correlated with the observed microst

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - A Statistical Theory of Fracture (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2218)

    By J. C. Fisher, J. H. Hollomon

    The fundamental problem concerning the fracture of both crystalline and noncrystalline solids is the divergence between the actua1 and the theorcticallY computed fracture stresses; the stress required

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - A Statistical Theory of Fracture (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2218)

    By J. H. Hollomon, J. C. Fisher

    The fundamental problem concerning the fracture of both crystalline and noncrystalline solids is the divergence between the actua1 and the theorcticallY computed fracture stresses; the stress required

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Notes On The Metallography Of Refined Copper.

    By Earl Bardwell

    (Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) THE structural relations existing between cuprous oxide and copper were first systematically studied by Heyn1, who suggested that a study of the microstructure of refin

    Jan 7, 1913

  • AIME
    Researches Affecting Copper and Brass

    By W. H. Bassett

    ABOUT twenty-five years ago the copper industry had outgrown the Lake Superior production. The electrolytic copper producers had- their process well in hand and the industry was well started in the us

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Tripoli (837f6fa8-6884-4ae3-ac08-9ac4bb854354)

    By Butler, P. B.

    TRIPOLI is a rather unusual form of silica, which thus far has been found in commercially valuable quantities only in the neighborhood of Seneca, Mo., although there are numerous deposits of somewhat

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Insulating Firebrick as a Furnace Lining

    By R. S. Bradley

    WHAT are known as insulating firebrick are lightweight firebrick with low thermal conductivity designed primarily for use in direct contact with furnace gases. These are a recent development in the re

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Los Alamos - The Town of Beginning Again - A behind-the-scenes story of life in the community built around the hidden laboratory where the A-bomb was made, and where nuclear research now goes forward

    By Marie Kinzel

    LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, the birthplace f the atomic bomb, is one of the most famous-and mysterious-places in the world. It leaped into fame on Aug. 6, 1945, when the first atomic bomb burst over Hiros

    Jan 1, 1946