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  • AIME
    New Dimensions In Overland Transportation

    By George H. K. Schenck

    Diminishing returns in management's fight to lower manufacturing expenses have added luster to savings that can be achieved in delivered costs through creative management of the distribution func

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Some Arizona Ore Deposits

    By B. S. Butler

    The principal ore deposits of Arizona are in the southern, cen-tral, and western portions of the state, which physiographically are part of the Basin and Range province, southwest of the Colo-rado Pla

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Progress in Blasting with LOX at Chuquicamata

    By W. D. B. Motter

    DURING the early development of blasting with liquid oxygen explosives the trend of experimentation was towards increasing the effectiveness of the explosive. Its characteristic of becoming inert afte

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Stream Pollution...A Mineral Industry Problem

    By John V. Beall

    STREAM pollution caused by waste waters from mineral industry operations is a problem that has grown up with the industry. Its importance to each operator is dependent on the amount and type of waste

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    All Resources Pooled to Produce Aviation Gasoline, Toluene, and Other War Necessities

    By Walter Miller

    NOW, after a year's continued impact of war, the task of the petroleum-refining industry stands out clearly and looms up in larger aspect. This time it is not, as it was so largely in the first W

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Equilibrium Relations in the Nickel-tin System

    By William Mikulas

    LITTLE work has been done in the field of the nickel-tin binary system. The complete diagram has been investigated on two occasions, but the results are in very poor agreement. The structure of a comp

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Shall Our Mineral Controls Be Continued After the War?

    By George B. Langford

    ON THE QUESTION of postwar controls there are today three schools of though ; some advocate state control of everything the socialists ; second are those who advocate the removal of all governmental c

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals In 1966

    By Gill Montgomery

    At this moment in the history of the world, the all- pervading and universally most important fact is that the world population is beginning to outgrow its food supply, and the United States has sudde

    Jan 2, 1967

  • AIME
    Gray Iron-Steel Plus Graphite

    By J. T. Mackenzie

    HENRY MARION HOWE, in whose memory we are gathered together, was one of the great thinkers who develop from time to time to whom is given the rare gift of synthesis. Analysis is given to few, but synt

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Gypsum Industry of Grand Rapids, Mich.

    By Albert A. Mathews

    OUTCROPS of gypsum rock near the present site of the city of Gland Rapids, Mich., were known to fur traders early in the nineteenth century. However, the deposits seemed without value and were not wor

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Economic Results of the New Technique in Phosphate Recovery

    By Charles E. Heinrichs

    IN the last decade one of our oldest and largest non-metallic metallic mineral industries has been the subject of persistent technical research, the results of which are another example of the benefit

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
  • AIME
    A Century and a Half of Development Behind the Adirondack Iron Mining Industry

    By J. R. Linney

    A HISTORY of the ore-mining and iron-smelting industry of the Adirondacks comprises a century and a half of pioneering by rugged individualists, both men and women. By geographical location, the clima

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Applications Of The Electron Microscope In Metallurgy

    By V. K. Zworykin

    THROUGHOUT its development the science of electronics, like so many other branches of science and industry, has been indebted to the metallurgist. Metallurgy has provided the electronic engineer with

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Geophysical Exploration - Less Seismic Work - Use of Gravimeter Increases - Various Techniques Perfected

    By Sherwin F. Kelly

    THE geophysical scene shifts and alters, the emphasis changes, and new possibilities loom, but the tendency is always towards widening the field and deepening the analytical penetration. Seismic metho

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Modernization - An Answer to the Cement Industry's Dilemma

    By A. H. Tousley

    Current problems in the cement industry are discussed and suggestions for solving them by modernization are made. Cement facility modernization is discussed in considerable detail with examples illust

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Strain Rate Effects in Tungsten

    By James H. Bechtold

    The yield strength of annealed tungsten was found to have a strain rate exponent 12 times as great as that of low carbon steel. The effects of temperature and strain rate could be correlated through t

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Ore Concentrating and Milling - Processing of Mineral Crudes Widens Into Chemical Engineering Field

    By E. H. Rose

    IN the realm of ore dressing the most pregnant feat of all time was announced in 1945: the winning of the mineral raw materials which made the harnessing of atomic energy possible. Lost in the stupend

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Use of Aerial Photographs in Geologic Mapping

    By Wayne Loel

    THE application of aerial photographs to all phases of geologic mapping is set forth, indicating the advantages to be gained in different types of country and under varying climatic conditions, Method

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME