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Lake George and Lake Champlain Meeting
THE members arrived at Ticonderoga, N. Y., at noon, Tuesday, October 15th, and were received by Mr. Cyrus Butler, Chairman of the Local Committee of Arrangements. During the afternoon the works of the
Jan 1, 1879
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Present Tendencies in Engineering Materials
By John A. Mathews
D R. CHARLES W. ELIOT, the great educator and philosopher-he of the five-foot book shelf-recently gave expression to a thought I had long been cherishing as a private opinion, when he said: "It is obv
Jan 1, 1926
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Milling Methods in 1929
By Galen H. Clevenger
THE real and permanent advances which take place in any industry are for the most part slow evolutions which frequently develop and grow almost imperceptibly from clay to clay. A meritorious idea may
Jan 1, 1930
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Dr. Merica Receives the John Fritz Medal
By AIME AIME
AWRDED jointly by the four AW Founder Engineering Societies the John Fritz Medal is generally regarded as the most signal honor that American engineers can confer on a fellow engineer. The roll of 34
Jan 1, 1938
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The 130th Meeting of the Institute at Birmingham
By AIME AIME
THE 130th Meeting of the Institute was held in Birmingham on Oct. 13 to 15, with visits to other mines and districts before and after. The last visit of the Institute to Birmingham was made in 1888, t
Jan 1, 1924
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The Columbia School of Mines (857802df-26fb-49cd-985e-bc72d6cc51cb)
By Thomas T., Read
TWO American students entered the Ecole des Mines in 1856, Joseph Lesley of Philadelphia and Thomas Egleston of New York. Lesley remained there only one year, but Egleston completed the whole 'cu
Jan 1, 1941
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Los Angeles Ideal for Regional Meeting
By AIME AIME
NO MORE SUITABLE time and place than LOS Angeles on Thursday and Friday, July 28 and 29, could have been chosen for the Western Regional Meeting of the~1nstitutk. After attending two clays of technica
Jan 1, 1932
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Fresh-water Diatomite in the Pacific Coast Region
By Henry Mulryan
DIATOMS are microscopic aquatic plants of the order Bacillariaceae. They are unicellular plants with skeletons made up of amorphous opaline silica. The skeletons show highly ornate, complicated geomet
Jan 1, 1939
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The Undeveloped Mineral Reserves of the Turkish Republic
By Emil-Paul Lorenz
Considered as a whole, the mineral resources of the Turkish Republic (Anatolia) are in their untapped virgin state, and the little development shown is not the result of modern systematic geologic exp
Jan 1, 1948
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Recent Developments In The Undercutting Of Coal By Machinery.*
By Edward W. Parker
I. INTRODUCTION. AT the Seventy-sixth meeting of the Institute, held in New York, N. Y., February, 1899, I presented a, paper on this subject entitled, Coal-Cutting Machinery,' which has become
Sep 1, 1910
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Crisis in Crude Oil?
By Harry C. Wiess
RECENT announcement of further restrictions on gasoline consumption in the Mid-West and Southwest has focused public attention on current discussions of an oil scarcity. Conflicting arguments are adva
Jan 1, 1943
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Pan-Amalgamation : an Instructive Laboratory- Experiment
By C. R. Hayward, H. O. Hofman
I. INTRODUCTION. THE aim of instruction in a metallurgical laboratory is to make real the principles on which metallurgical processes and operations are based, and to foster the spirit of investigati
Jun 1, 1909
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Papers - Metal Mining - Miami Copper Company Methods of Mining Low-grade Orebody (With Discussion)
By F. W. Maclennan
The following is a list of members who died in 1929. It is compiled from reports to the Secretary's office. Biographical sketches published in Mining and Metallurgy are indicated in the last t
Jan 1, 1930
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Believe It or Not
By PALMER H. TYLER
WHEN the Mid-Continent Section of the A. I. M. E. met at the roof garden dining room of the Tulsa Club on Monday evening, May 13, most of the members present came prepared with a credulity-stretching
Jan 1, 1929
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Geographical Distribution of the U. S. Mineral Industry
By AIME AIME
MINERAL production of the United States is valued at over five billion dollars a year at present and the industry employs close to a million workmen, yet such maps as are available that might indicate
Jan 1, 1941
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Shaft-Sinking at Suria, Spain - II
By J. B. STEWART
T HE position of each hole of any series of holes was carefully located by the surveyor, plotted in plan and elevation, and numbers assigned to them. The second series was staggered halfway between th
Jan 1, 1926
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Lubrication of Mining Equipment - Part 1 - Cutters, Loaders, Conveyors, and Elevators
By Charles W. Frey
SUCCESSFUL mining today means proper mechanization. Before any mine can begin production on a paying scale, some machinery must be installed. There must be pumps to remove water, fans and blowers to p
Jan 1, 1938
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Technical Aspects of Coal-Oil Mixture Combustion (83f9c155-3940-402b-a12b-153f636d887d)
By C. B. Foster, S. I. Freedman, E. M. Jamgochian
Coal-oil mixture (COM) combustion technology is regarded by the US Department of Energy (DOE) as near term and Potentially applicable to existing utility and industrial steam generators and for inject
Jan 1, 1980
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Part XII – December 1969 – Papers - Zinc Extrusion as a Thermally Activated Process
By J. J. Jonas, G. Gagnon
SHG zinc was extruded in the temperature range 110" to 350°C and the strain rate range 0.05 to 5 sec-1 The strain rate/flow stress/temperature results were analyzed using a power sinh stress relations
Jan 1, 1970
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