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  • AIME
    Engineers Necessary for Continued American Industrial Progress

    By Donald B. Gillies

    WE HAVE come a long way since the time of the old steel master who declared that chemistry would ultimately bring the steel business to ruin. Yet I sometimes doubt whether even now we fully recognize

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel ? Developments in Stainless Types, Flame Treatment, Graphite Steel, Castings, and Furnace Atmospheres

    By Robert S. Williams

    NO new ferrous alloys have been produced in the last five or six years that are as outstanding contributions to civilization as were the high-speed steels of the early part of the century or the stain

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Twenty Years Progress in the Oil Industry

    By L. A. Cranson

    WHEN I came out of Stanford University in 1922, the out-look for men trained in geology, petroleum engineering, and mining was indeed dismal; in fact, so much so that most of us looked upon our future

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Ore Transportation at the Alaska Juneau .Mines

    By Williams, J. A.

    THE Alaska Juneau mine has been developed through an adit driven at the elevation of the top of the mill and all mining is done above this main haulage level. As a result of wholesa1e"mining operation

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    California Oil Production Outlook for 1930

    By H. NORTON JOHNSON

    THE oil industry in California during 1929 reached new heights and new depths in the discovery and development of the oil resources of the State. The discovery of new fields, and more especially the d

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Production and Practice in the Two World Wars

    By C. D. King

    A QUARTER century ago this country was producing an extraordinary quantity of iron and steel, with a decisive influence on the outcome of the first World War. Today this country is again demonstrating

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Education for the Petroleum Industry (a1221f1c-e785-4d3f-96da-6d1a4f800ee7)

    By Thomas T., Read

    E DUCATION for the mineral industry was at first a single comprehensive curriculum, but it was early recognized that the main basis of mining is physics, while that of metallurgy is chemistry. The fir

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Auxiliary Equipment for Truck-Haulage Pits

    By Charles A. Lindberg

    Mobile cranes on tires are perhaps the most important accessory in truck-haulage pits. They usually are of 20-ton capacity at short radius and with outriggers but have considerable overload capacity.

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Mining and Metallurgy - Oil Production

    By H. J. Wasson

    WITH the close of 1932 and the third year of the depression, the activity of oil production presents, amidst the general wreckage and chaos of industrial society, a somewhat unique picture of rational

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    White Pine Mine Development - Flat Lying, Deep Seated Ore Calls For Mobile Equipment, Conveyor Haulage

    By Richard F. Moe

    INTEREST in developing White Pine, considered since 1942, was renewed by the Korean conflict and its shortage of domestic sources of copper. In view of this Morris F. La Croix, president of Copper Ran

    Jan 4, 1954

  • AIME
    Abstracts of Papers to be Presented at Technical Session of February Meeting

    By E. V. Daveler, Frank L. Antisell

    CERTAIN physical and chemical properties of copper are so intimately related that a change in variation of the physical properties indicates a certain chemical change. The standard specifications of c

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    The Hydrometallurgy of Copper, and its Separation from the Precious Metals

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    WET processes for the extraction of copper from its ores have of late attracted much attention, especially in Europe, where the use of oupriferous iron-pyrites as a' source of sulphur prevails. T

    Jan 1, 1882

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Mineral Pigments

    By Kenneth R. Hancock

    Iron oxides are unique in that they are the only significant colored mineral found in a natural state suitable for use as a pigment after it has been pulverized to pigmentary size. The current world p

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Discovering Gold-Quartz Veins Electrically

    By Sherwin F. Kelly

    THAT gold ores occur in Georgia is a fact apparently not widely known outside of that state, yet in the last hundred years nearly $18,000,000 worth of gold has been mined there. The discovery of gold-

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Rolla Meeting, Industrial Minerals Division

    By AIME AIME

    EVEN the weather man joined in a friendly conspiracy to make the fall meeting of the Industrial Minerals Division at Rolla, Mo., Oct. 23-25. the splendid surges that it was. Following weeks of rain, t

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Geology - The Gem Stocks and Adjacent Orebodies, Coeur d'Alene District, Idaho

    By G. M. Crosby

    Seven mines with important production records in the Coeur d'Alene lie adjacent to the Gem stocks —the Frisco (Gem), Hercules, Interstate, Rex (Sixteen to One), Success (Granite), Sunset, and Tam

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Recent Developments In Pebble Milling

    By Bunting S. Crocker

    Pebble grinding was used at Lake Shore Mines in 1949. A full description of experimental evidence and test plant results was published in 1952 1 and further operating details in 1954.2 In more recent

    Jan 5, 1959

  • AIME
    Division Lectures - The 1962 Extractive Metallurgy Lecture - The World's Most Complex Metallurgy (Copper, Lead, and Zinc)

    By Albert J. Phillips

    The effect of impurities on the flowsheet in the smelting and refining circuits for copper, lead and zinc is reviewed and the interflow of by-poduct metals from copper, lead and zinc plants is pointed

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Rubber-Tired End-Loaders Replace Crawler Units In Eagle-Picher's Illinois-Wisconsin Mines

    By Robert L. Haffner

    When mining operations of The Eagle-Picher Co. began in the Illinois-Wisconsin zinc mining field in 1949, all underground loading of broken ore and waste was by caterpillar-tracked machines. Beginning

    Jan 6, 1962