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Mineral Industry Education - Professional Engineers Are Taking Increasing Interest in Professorial ProblemsBy Francis A. Thornson
WITHOUT desiring to perpetrate an Irish bull I think we may safely say that the major developments of the year in mineral industry education have taken place outside of the field itself. I refer to th
Jan 1, 1939
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Iron Ore Co. of Canada's Computerized Analysis Method Speeds Mine Planning and Pit DesignBy Mara Kosovac, Sujan K. Kundu
The Iron Ore Co. of Canada (IOC) has developed a computerized plan analysis method for its open-pit iron mining operations which will eliminate much of the tedious manual drafting of pit design plans
Jan 7, 1978
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Field Trips Sandwiched Into a Three-Day Meeting of Nonmetallics Division at WilmingtonBy AIME AIME
A FALL meeting that should have repercussions both in the "Transactions" and MINING AND METALLURGY was that of the Industrial Minerals Division (Nonmetallics) at Wilmington, Oct. 21-23; headquarters,
Jan 1, 1943
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Breaking Half a Million Tons in One BlastBy M. A. Roche
AST fall over half a million tons of ore and rock were broken in one blast at the open pit of the Hudson Bay Mining & Smelting Company's operation, at Flin Flon, Manitoba. The following particula
Jan 1, 1934
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Glen Summit Paper - The Fuel-Supply of the United States. [Presidential Address at Glen Summit]By John Birkinbine
Four meetings of the Institute have been held in the anthracite coal-fields of Pennsylvania, and excursioris into the district, in connection with meetings elsewhere, have familiarized our members wit
Jan 1, 1892
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Calcination of LimestoneBy E. T. Turkdogan, L. S. Darken, R. G. Olsson, H. A. Wriedt
Several aspects of the calcination of Michigan limestone were investigated: the rate of calcination of limestone spheres with diameters from 1.8 to 14 cm at temperatures from 800° to 1200°C by a therm
Jan 1, 1974
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Institute of Metals Division - The Isolation of Carbides from High Speed SteelBy 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
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Institute of Metals Division - Shock Loading to Produce Fine Grain Structure (TN)By R. G. McQueen, E. G. Zukas
THE production of isotropic fine-grained ingot iron would be most useful since physical measurements associated with the elastic properties of iron are influenced by the size and orientation of the in
Jan 1, 1962
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Colorado School of MinesThe Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colo. M F Coolbaugh, President. Since 1906 the School of Mines has issued a journal, known as the Quarterly of the Colorado School of Mines, which carries many
Jan 1, 1933
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Wilkes-Barre Paper - Note upon the Cost of Six Regenerative FurnacesBy P. Barnes
These furnaces are of the ordinary Siemens type, and present no special peculiarities of construction. The bed of each is 8 feet by 20 feet clear inside of the walls and ports. The producers are place
Jan 1, 1879
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Comparison of In-Situ and Laboratory Test Results on GraniteBy Richard L. Stowe
Four NX-diameter holes were diamond-drilled in competent granite. Samples of the recovered core were used in laboratory tests. A borehole, plate-bearing device known as a Goodman jack was used to perf
Jan 1, 1973
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St. Joe's Pneumatic ChargerBy L. W. Casteel
St. Joseph Lead Company's Southeast Missouri mines have been successfully converted to the use of ammonium nitrate and fuel oil as a blasting agent. This is significant to the company because it
Jan 5, 1962
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Technical Notes - Purification of Antimony and Tin by a New Method of Zone RefiningBy A. J. Goss, M. Tanenbaum, W. G. Pfann
THE purification of two metals, antimony and tin, by zone refining is described, and a reciprocating method of passing molten zones through a straight ingot, which effects a considerable economy of ti
Jan 1, 1955
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Developing a Utah ?Cold Mine?By Fleming, R. C.
ONE OF THE NEWEST developments of industry rising from the commercial application of scientific knowledge is in the making of solid carbon dioxide from the gas about 1925 the first efforts were made t
Jan 1, 1932
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Modification to Swanson's Free Settling EquationBy V. F. Swanson
At the AIME meeting in Tampa in Oct. 1966, an empirically developed equation was presented which allowed the calculation of free settling velocity for any sized particle: 1 [ ] This equation re
Jan 1, 1976
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Electrochemical Study of the Molybdenite-Potassium Diethyldithiophosphate SystemBy S. Chander, D. W. Fuerstenau
The inherently sluggish nature of the reactions involving sulfide minerals, particularly molybdenite, in aqueous solutions under ambient flotation conditions make their investigation complicated and d
Jan 1, 1975
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Chattanooga Paper - The Geology and Mineral Resources of Sesquachee Valley, TennesseeBy W. M. Brown
SEQUACHEE Valley includes portions of the counties of Marion, Sequachee, Bledsoe and Cumberland. It extends in a general direction parallel with the Great Valley of East Tennessee, some 75 miles north
Jan 1, 1886
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A World Bank Plan For Guaranteeing Investment In Foreign Mineral DevelopmentBy Charles Will Wright
THE economy as well as the living standards of a country depends largely upon adequate supplies of raw materials at reasonable prices. Geological and climatic conditions responsible for the occurrence
Jan 1, 1948
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Engineering Standards for SocietyBy George Otis Smith
A YEAR ago, ,at the Institute's dinner, I closed my A remarks with the words: "The scientist devotes his life to the advancement of learning; the engineer gives his to the advancement of living."
Jan 1, 1929
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Democracy Within the InstituteBy AIME AIME
THERE is a constant reiteration in some quarters that technical societies are autocratic and that democracy is utterly lacking and that members would welcome democratic societies in which they had ful
Jan 1, 1920