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  • AIME
    Shaft Sinking Today - A Boring Business Tomorrow

    By Maurice Grieves

    The great majority of shafts constructed today are still excavated by drilling and blasting, a method which changed very little in over 100 years until the introduction of the mechanical lashing unit

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    56. Arizona and Adjacent New Mexico

    By Charles A. Anderson

    Arizona and western New Mexico contain 17 of the 25 leading copper mines in the United States. Production of molybdenite, lead, zinc, and by-product gold and silver is important. Precambrian ore depos

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    The "Robbins'' Moles - Status And Future

    By Richard J. Robbins

    Mechanical moles have developed through a tedious process of evolution. At times it has seemed that tunnel borers have been subject to the same Darwinian rules of evolution as their zoological namesak

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Geophysics ? Geophysical Oil Exploration in 1944 Nearly 30 Percent Ahead of 1943 Mineral Prospecting Likewise on Increase

    By C. A. Heiland

    IN the third year of war, geophysical oil exploration broke all records to keep pace with the demand for increased reserves. Geophysical prospecting for strategic and other minerals also grew in scope

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Woman's Auxiliary

    Report of the Americanization Society, New York Section During the past two months the Americanization Committee has held social meetings of various kinds for foreign-born women, as a preliminary to

    Jan 6, 1918

  • AIME
    Philadelphia Paper - The Importance of Surveying in Geology

    By Benjamin Smith Lyman

    THE importance of topography to geology is so commonly underrated as to deserve to be pointed out again and again. The relation of topography to the different branches of geology may be seen best by a

  • AIME
    Fuel-Gas, and the Strong Water-Gas System

    By Henry Wurtz

    HERACLITUS, a sage of antiquity, called the dark philosopher, who refused a throne, preferring a hermit's cell, propounded, twenty-four centuries since, the maxim : [ ] War (or strife) enge

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - Note on the Cost and Speed of Sinking the East Shaft of the New Kleinfontein Co., Benoni, South Africa

    By Edward J. Way

    +1KLEINFONTEIN GROUP CENTRAL ADMlNISTRATION, BENONI, TRANSVAAL, S. AFRICA. The cost and the speed of sinking a shaft are factors of so great importance in operating a mine, that the data given in T

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Mineral Economics - Physical Output of Mineral Products Declined Slightly in 1946 But Value Reached a New Peak - Prospects for 1947 Excellent

    By Elmer W. Pehrson

    NINETEEN FORTY-SIX was an eventful year for the mineral industries. Perhaps the most significant development was the socialization of industry in Great Britain, initiated in 1945 but carried to fruiti

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    U. S. Bureau Of Mines Investigations And Research On Bumps

    By Edward Thomas

    THE late George S. Rice was active in the investigation of bumps, particularly in the last ten years of his career as chief mining engineer of the U. S. Bureau of Mines. Since most of his investigatio

    Jan 8, 1958

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Forthcoming Meetings Of Societies (d1e313d6-b61f-4623-b79a-97b6f27a1a76)

    Organization Place Date 1919 American Chemical Society :.... Philadelphia, Pa. Sept. 2-6 National Assn. of Stationary Engineers Huntington, W. Va. Sept. 8 American Peat Society Minneapolis, Minn. S

    Jan 7, 1919

  • AIME
    Practical and Legal Aspects of Mine Financing

    By Philip S. Mathews

    THE tremendous stimulus given to the mining industry by the gold and silver policy of the present administration has found the capital market for mines ill prepared to afford practical means of financ

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Forthcoming Meetings Of Societies (ad30936d-ada5-49e4-a8e8-e6040e4f616b)

    Organization Place Date 1919 American Chemical Society Philadelphia, Pa. Sept. 2-6 National Assn. of Stationary Engineers Huntington, W. Va. Sept. 8 American Peat Society Minneapolis, Minn. Sep

    Jan 8, 1919

  • AIME
    19. Fluorite-Zinc-Lead Deposits of the Illinois-Kentucky Mining District

    By Robert M. Grogan, James C. Bradbury

    The Illinois-Kentucky mining district has, since 1880, accounted for 80 per cent of all U.S. production of fluorspar. The ore deposits are of two types: vein deposits formed by fissure fillings along

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Symposium On Western Phosphate Mining ? Foreword

    By E. M. Norris

    Phosphate deposits are distributed widely over the earth's surface. Of the known areas of deposit, eight fields are of particular interest because of their vast reserves of high grade phosphatic

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Geologists Need Maps

    By WILLIAM BOWIE

    IN most human endeavors a knowledge of the terrain is essential to the effective carrying out of projects, but no line of work is more dependent on maps than theoretical and applied geology. Maps of a

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Cable Slings - A Versatile 'Band-Aid' For Providing Safety In Underground Mining

    By Brian R. Castle, James J. Scott

    INTRODUCTION Referring to a ground support system as a 'band-aid' borders on getting cute, but the application of cable slings in U.S. mining is somewhat analogous. Where problems in the

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Velocity of Galena and Quartz Falling in Water

    By ROBERT. RICHARDS

    I. INTRODUCTION The object of this paper is to enlarge the field of settling velocities treated by me in my former papers, Close Sizing Before Jigging, and Sorting Before Sizing.' There seemed n

    May 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Flotation Characteristics of Hematite, Goethite and Activated Quartz with 18-Carbon Aliphatic Acids and Related Compounds

    By S. R. B. Cooke, H. S. Choi, I. Iwasaki

    In a previous article1 the function of various fatty acids as collectors for iron ores was reported for the two alternate processes; (a) the flotation of iron-oxide minerals, and (b) the flotation of

    Jan 1, 1961