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  • AIME
    Park City Mining District (960bf2d7-eb6b-4a36-92a3-ae79acaf63a8)

    "No true conception of the Park City mining district can be obtained without first giving consideration to the part it has played as a consistent producer of mineral wealth. Its position in this regar

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    American Industrial Commission To France

    Joseph G. Butler, Jr., who represented this Institute on the American Industrial Commission to France, has presented a report to the Chairman of the Commission regarding the steel industry of France i

    Jan 12, 1916

  • AIME
    The World's Largest Plate Rolling Mill

    By C. L. HUSTON

    MY ANCESTRAL connection with the manufacture of boiler plate runs back through four generations, and my personal acquaintance with the practice reaches back to the time, in my ,boy- .hood days, when i

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    A Reliable Steel Rail and How to Make It

    By James E. York

    AT a meeting of the American Society for Testing Materials at Atlantic City, June, 1908, Dr.. C. B. Dudley, in his presidential address,' showed the vital necessity of not only making a steel rai

    May 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Thermal Drying Of Western Coal - A Review

    By Bauer. Larry G.

    The vast coal reserves in the Wyoming, Montana, North and South Dakota region are sufficient to supply the total energy needs of the United States for several hundred years. Not only is there an abund

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Carbonization - The Selection of Coals for Carbonization

    By B. P. Mulcahy

    When the phrase "selection of coal for carbonization" is used, there is always the implied continuance of thought "to make good coke.'' The reason for this, of course, lies in the fact that,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Carbonization - The Selection of Coals for Carbonization

    By B. P. Mulcahy

    When the phrase "selection of coal for carbonization" is used, there is always the implied continuance of thought "to make good coke.'' The reason for this, of course, lies in the fact that,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Silver-lead Smelting Progress in Chihuahua, Mexico

    By H. R. MacMichael

    IN the Chihuahua district of Mexico the first smelting was that inaugurated by the early Spaniards for the production of silver bullion. The ores treated were high in silver and lead. Silver-lead bull

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Status of Phosphate Industry of Western United States

    By FRANK COLE

    THE territory covered in this discussion includes all the states west of the Mississippi river. Agriculture is expanding each year in this section, but until recent years the application of commercial

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Fifteen Years Of Consistent Longwall Production At Bethlehem's Cambria Division, Ebensburg, Pennsylvania

    By Edmund J. Korber, Donald E. Raab, Frank A. Burns

    During the early 1960s, the advent of self- advancing longwall roof supports triggered serious consideration by Bethlehem management to introduce the technique of longwall mining at one of our central

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    Ray Consolidated

    ONE of the interesting-though not unnatural-features of the whole Porphyry Copper development is the way in which the history of each property dovetails with that of one or more of the others. The sam

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Breaking And Crushing (Chapter 6)

    By Homer W. Riley

    ANTHRACITE SMALL power-driven, toothed, cast-iron rolls were used first to break anthracite in 1844. Prior to that time, men with hammers, who stood on perforated cast-iron plates, broke the large

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Discussion - Of Mr. Parker's Paper on The Coal-Briquette Plan at Bankhead, Alberta, Canada (see p. 236)

    William H. Blauvelt, Syracuse, N. Y.:—Is the coal itself from which the briquettes are made of good quality for steam-ing-purposes? Mr. Parker :—It is an anthracite coal mined near Bank-head arid u

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Isolation of Carbides from High Speed Steel

    By M. Cohen, D. J. Blickwede

    Quantitative observations concerning the carbide phases in high speed steel are of importance for two general reasons: (1) the carbides, being inevitable constituents of the final structure, exert a d

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Wildcat Drilling in Wyoming

    By E. G. SINCLAIR

    DRILLING wildcat wells in Wyoming differs a little from methods used in any other field. Here it is always advisable to start the hole as large as is convenient in order to carry each string of pipe a

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Virginia State Department of Labor and Industry

    Commonwealth of Virginia, Department of Labor and Industry, Rooms 313-318, State Office bldg , Richmond, Va John Hopkins Hall, Jr., Commissioner of Labor The Department of Labor and Industry publ

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    North Central Pennsylvania

    We have seen that the first coal development in Pennsylvania was in the Pittsburgh bed in the southwestern corner of the state. The next mining, in point of time, was done in Clearfield County along t

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Process of Thermal Spalling Behavior in Rocks - An Exploratory Study (ee241187-f3df-4003-8c5e-c08bcb46c2f0)

    By Thirumalai, K.

    Although the term "spalling" has long been known, Norton l first referred to its usage for the fracture or disintegration of materials subjected to rapid temperature changes. Spalling of ceramic mater

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Conservation of Natural Resources

    By James Douglas

    IN discussing the waste upon which hinges, or is supposed to hinge, so largely the preservation of our national resources, the conclusions reached would be more reliable if actual ex¬perience were con

    May 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Members, Associates and Junior Members (f69fdc50-8e59-407d-b6b1-d035c170c710)

    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