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  • AIME
    Professional Services

    JAMES A. BARR Consulting Engineer Mt. Pleasant. Tennessee Washington. D.C. BEHRE DOLBEAR G COMPANY Consulting Mining Engineers and Geologists 11 Broadway New York 4, N. Y. BLANDFORD

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Professional Services (f9edb78a-6cc0-43df-bc9c-168db5aa1bf4)

    [JAMES A. BARR Consulting Engineer Mt. Pleasant, Tennessee Washington, D.C. BEHRE DOLBEAR & COMPANY Consulting Mining Engineers and Geologists 11 Broadway New York 4, N. Y. BLANDFORD C. BU

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Professional Services (fb918c98-f38a-4580-bdc6-144a8f4c0cb4)

    JAMES A. BARR Consulting Engineer Mt. Pleasant; Tennessee Washington, D.C. BEHRE DOLBEAR G COMPANY Consulting Mining Engineers and Geologists 11 Broadway New York 4. N. Y. BLANDFOR

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    The Stock Exchange and Its Relation to the Mining Industry

    By FRABK HERVEY PETTINGELL

    THE stock exchange and its functions is about as well understood by the average individual as the fourth dimension. What is a stock exchange? Divested of the rules and regulations by which it is gover

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Use of Coal in Zinc Production

    By W. M. Peirce

    COAL'S importance in the metallurgy of zinc may be gauged by the fact that approximately a million and a half tons is so employed annually in the United States. This brief paper will show in what

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    The- Kaffir Mine-Laborer.

    By Thomas Lane Carter

    THE history of mining in South Africa differs somewhat from that of other countries in the part taken by the aborigines in the development ?of the mineral deposits. The Spaniards in America, and the f

    Nov 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Uses of Silver in Wartime

    By J. L. Christie, R. H. Leach

    SO much has been written recently about the use of silver to replace scarce metals that certain facts about silver and its uses should be of interest. Figures for the production and use of silver, ta

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Conference on Production and Design Limitation and Possibilities for Powder Metallurgy (Metal Technology, January 1945) - Certain Characteristics of Silver-base Powder Metallurgical Products - Discussion

    By F. R. Hensel

    P. R. Kalischer.*—I should like to amplify a little one of the points made by Dr. Hensel, and rather violently disagree with him at the same time. He brought out the point that when the higher forming

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Construction Methods, Cushman Tunnel No. 2

    By F. E. ROGERS

    CUSHMAN TUNNEL No. 2 is adjacent to the Hood Canal, near potlatch, Wash. It is 17 ft. inside .diameter, about 13,000 ft., or two and one- half, miles in length, and is a part of the second unit of the

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Notes on Mine-Surveying Instruments, with Special Reference to Mr. Dunbar D, Scott's Paper on their Evolution, and its Discussion

    By Benjamin Smith Lyman

    PAGE I. ANCIENT HISTORY,........... 57 Accepted Fables ; Babylonian Mapping ; First Surveying. II. COMPASS,.............59 Chinese Invention; Marco Polo; First European Compasses ; Early Knowledg

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
    A Portable Assay-Outfit For Field-Work.

    By S. K. Bradford

    (Pittsburg Meeting, March, 1910.) FOR years past I have traveled in quest of promising mining-properties, over almost impassable mountain-trails to remote places in the mining-regions, usually, many

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    The Precious Metals

    By Arthur Mackwell

    The role of the precious metals is changing rapidly. They are becoming primarily materials of modern industry, and their decorative and monetary functions are diminishing in relative importance. Certa

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    From Indian Scrapings To 85-Ton Trucks: The Development Of Chino

    By W. A. Gibson, A. D. Trujillo

    The Santa Rita copper deposit first served as a source of native copper for Indian implements and weapons. In 1801 Santa Rita copper, trans- ported by mule train to Chihuahua, began to be used commerc

    Jan 1, 1966

  • AIME
    The 132nd Meeting of the Institute

    By AIME AIME

    ANOTHER meeting of the Institute has passed into history and it fully sustained the reputation of the Institute as a live organization of the men, and nowadays the women, concerned with the mineral .

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Reminiscences of Metallurgists and Plants in the San Francisco Area

    By ABBOT A. HANKS

    WHEN gold was discovered in California, and San Francisco grew almost over night from a handful of people to many thousands, one of the first difficulties experienced was the lack of money. Gold dust

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Suggested Solution of the Silver Problem

    By HARRINCTON EMERSON

    UNEMPLOYMENT is the most ominous shadow ahead of the industrial nations today. Only two great industrial countries are free from unemployment, France and the Soviet Commonwealth. In France the social

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Government Aids to the Mining Industry - Scope of Participation Should Aid Private Enterprise

    By Paul M. Tyler

    MUCH has been said in print, and much more that was unprintable, about burdensome controls, taxation, and multiplying restrictive, regulatory, or taxing activities of the Federal Government, but not s

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    The Navy's Salvage Program

    By F. Lowell Lawrance

    JOHN SMITH, citizen of the U.S.A., has become so accustomed to reading that Congress has appropriated billions of dollars to pay war costs. that he no longer is impressed by relatively small figures,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Surveying And Sampling Diamond-Drill Holes.

    By E. E. White

    (Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) IN, August, 1911, I read a paper before the Lake Superior Mining Institute' on surveying and sampling diamond-drill holes. The present paper gives a more thor

    Nov 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Cement and Concrete Are Not What They Used to Be

    By Raymond E. Davis

    LET'S imagine we are at the Grand L Coulee Dam, where daily 15,000 barrels of low-heat Portland cement and 27,000 tons of processed aggregate in various sizes are mixed to produce 30,000 tons of

    Jan 1, 1939