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AIME Shares In Centennial Observance With Outstanding Technical SessionsTHE Annual Fall Meeting held in Chicago in conjunction with the celebration of a Centennial of Engineering brought forth a round of field trips and symposiums which did much to add to the store of inf
Jan 1, 1952
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Members, Associates and Junior Members (229f966d-1d21-4fc9-829d-ab1c8cea508f)THOSE NOT MARKED ARE MEMBERS; MARKED THUS t ARE ASSOCIATES. HEAVY-FACED TYPE SIGNIFIES HONORARY MEMBERSHIP. JUNIOR MEMBERS ARE MARKED II. THE FIGURES AT THE END OF THE ADDRESS INDICATE THE YEAR OF ELE
Jan 1, 1917
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Industriall Minerals - The History and Development of Phosphate Rock MiningBy R. B. Full
DURING the summer of 1949, the United Nations Scientific Conference on the Conservation and Utilization of Resources met at Lake Success. As summed up by one writer, the purpose was: "That everyone wi
Jan 1, 1952
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Chicago Paper - A Use Classification of Coal (with Discussion)By George H. Ashley
The present critical state of the supply, distribution, and utilization of coal and the necessity for pooling and zoning coals calls renewed attention to the lack of any fully adequate classification
Jan 1, 1920
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New York Paper February, 1918 - Social and Religious Organizations as Factors in the Labor Problem (with Discussion)By E. E. Bach
The administration of industrial organization today embraces more than the cost of production and selling prices. Competition is deeper seated than mechanical devices, overhead charges, and a shrewd m
Jan 1, 1918
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Mine Ventilation in 1930By R. R. Sayers
THE South African Mining and Engineering Journal recently pointed out that no satisfactory solution of the question of compensation for silicosis can be arrived at by placing further liability of an i
Jan 1, 1931
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Woman's Auxiliary Holds Splendid MeetingBy AIME AIME
THE annual meeting of the Auxiliary to the A. I. M. E. was marked by the most delightful cordiality and warm spirit of welcome on the part of the members of the New York Section and an equally charmin
Jan 1, 1929
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Underground Mining and Rapid ExcavationBy Thomas E. Howard
Recently, the mining community has begun to move toward a more prominent place in the structure of American society. Extensive press coverage of our energy problems during the past year or two has led
Jan 6, 1975
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New Haven Paper - The Copper-Deposits of the Sierra Oscura, New MexicoBy H. W. Turner
Lying to the east of the Rio Grande, in central New Mexico, is a long N. and S. mountain range, broken into separate ridges at several points. These have received separate names; the mountains at the
Jan 1, 1903
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The Herculaneum Smelter - Sintering, Blast-Furnace Smelting, and Refining Produce Chemical and Corroding Grades of LeadBy W. T. lsbell
HERCULANEUM, MO., about thirty miles south of St. Louis on the Mississippi River, is the site of the lead smelter of the St. Joseph Lead Co. The lead concentrates come by rail from the Flat River dist
Jan 1, 1947
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The Application of Dry-Air Blast to the Manufacture of Iron-Supplementary DataBy JAMES GAYLE
(Presented at the Washington meeting, May 3, 1905, and simultaneously sent to the Iron and Steel Institute, for presentation at the meeting of that Society in London, May 11, 1905.) IT is to be regre
Jul 1, 1905
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Institute of Metals Division Lectures - Electrons, Atoms, Metals and Alloys (Metals Tech., April 1947, T. P. 2130)By William Hume-Rothery
I need not say how much I appreciate the honor of being asked to lecture to you, and how much I would thank you for your kind invitation. It is encouraging to feel that the abnormal restrictions of th
Jan 1, 1947
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Technical Papers and Discussions - Institute of Metals Division Lectures - Electrons, Atoms, Metals and Alloys (Metals Tech., April 1947, T. P. 2130)By William Hume-Rothery
I need not say how much I appreciate the honor of being asked to lecture to you, and how much I would thank you for your kind invitation. It is encouraging to feel that the abnormal restrictions of th
Jan 1, 1947
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Drilling–Equipment, Methods and Materials - The "Perfect-Cleaning" 'Theory of Rotary DrillingBy W. C. Maurer
A drilling-rate formula for roller-cone bits is derived from rock crater-ing mechanisms. This formula holds for "perfect cleaning", which is defined as the condition where all of the rock debris is re
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Magnesium-Its Sources, Methods of Reduction, and Commercial ApplicationBy Paul D. V. Manning
MAGNESIUM is an exceedingly strategic material but the importance of its production at the time this war started was not realized. Our Government then suddenly became much alive to the need of a treme
Jan 1, 1943
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Aptitudes and Engineering CareersBy John Mills
THREE case histories from professions other than engineering will serve to introduce ideas basic to this discussion. Case (1) Date, about 1900. A young man, B. D. from a three-year graduate course in
Jan 1, 1947
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Method of Cementing Water-carrying Fissures in the Star CrosscutBy Charles H. Foreman
IN JUNE 1921, the Sullivan &lining Co., owned jointly by the Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mining & Concentrating Co. and the Hecla Mining Co, started work on the development of the Star Mine. The developm
Jan 1, 1924
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Electrons, Atoms, Metals And AlloysBy William Hume-Rothery
MR. CHAIRMAN, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: I need not say how much I appreciate the honor of being asked to lecture to you, and how much I would thank you for your kind invitation. It is encouraging to feel
Jan 1, 1947
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Electric Motors in the Tri-State FieldBy ROY BERENTZ
MANUFACTURE is the transformation of material by the application of energy and power. The energy of a man exerted throughout a day is equivalent to about one horsepower-hour of mechanical work an amou
Jan 1, 1930
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Preserve the Cornish Pump - Huge Engines, Some Used in England Even Now, a Monument to the ingenuity of the Cornish MinersBy James T. Kemp
AN historical society of particular interest to mining engineers all over the world was born in Cornwall in 1935. A hundred-year-old winding engine then finished its long labors at the Levant mine on
Jan 1, 1947