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  • AIME
    Formation And Properties Of Single Crystals Of Synthetic Rutile

    By Charles H. Moore

    In the study of the properties of rutile pigments it became apparent several years ago that certain physical and optical properties could not be determined on particles of pigmentary size. Since refle

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Steel Linings for Deep Mine Shafts

    By Roger L. Brockenbrough

    Steels available for mine-shaft applications are discussed, and the use of steel linings for round and rectangular shafts is reviewed. For rectangular shafts, frameworks constructed of square or recta

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Candidates For Membership

    By AIME AIME

    The following persons have been proposed for election as members or associates of the Institute during the period, March 16 to May 1, 1907. Their names are published for the information of members and

    May 1, 1907

  • AIME
    William Wallace Mein - Director, AIME

    By AIME

    WILLIAM WALLACE MEIN, known to his intimates as "Will" or "Billy", is a mining engineer who has taken the fundamentals of successful mining--operating, engineering, and financial-and applied them to t

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Destructive and Non-destructive Tests of Welds

    By J. R. Dawson, A. B. Kinzel

    THE purpose of testing is to determine whether the material in question is identical in all essential respects with similar material which has given satisfactory service. The most common method of sec

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - The Design and Calibration of a Faraday Pail for Measuring Charge Density of Mineral Grains

    By James E. Lawver, James L. Wright

    This paper discusses the design and calibration of a Faraday pail for measuring electric charge. The paper also shows that at least for two minerals, quartz and calcite, the phenomenon that Johnson te

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Los Alamos - The Town of Beginning Again - A behind-the-scenes story of life in the community built around the hidden laboratory where the A-bomb was made, and where nuclear research now goes forward

    By Marie Kinzel

    LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, the birthplace f the atomic bomb, is one of the most famous-and mysterious-places in the world. It leaped into fame on Aug. 6, 1945, when the first atomic bomb burst over Hiros

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    The Aluminum Industry

    By Philip D. Wilson

    FEAST and famine-or, chronologically, famine and feast-have characterized the aluminum supply program during 1943. Fortunately for the war effort the famine phase is over and aluminum production is no

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Prospecting with the Long-Hole Drill in the Tri-State Zinc-Lead District

    By W. F. NETZZEBAND

    THE long-hole drill has been used for prospecting underground in the tri-State district for several years, and its value has been pretty thoroughly proved. An attempt was made to get a statement of th

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    What Has Made Possible the 15,000-ft. Oil Well?

    By W. A. Eardley

    FIFTEEN years ago the world's deepest oil well penetrated the earth about 7300 ft. That depth has now been more than doubled. Why has such deep drilling become necessary and how has it become pos

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    What Everyone Should Know About Silicosis

    By Emery R. Hayhurst

    SILICOSIS has been described in a report of the American Public Health Association as a disease due to breathing air containing silica, characterized anatomically by generalized fibrotic changes and t

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Why Young Miners and Metallurgists Should Join the A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    DURING my senior year at college a professor said to his class that a student who failed to obtain a passing grade in that certain subject could not graduate with his class and that his diploma would

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    The Morenci Concentrator

    By A. P., Svenningsen

    ECONOMICAL handling of a minimum of 25,000 tons of minus 3/4-in. ore per day, grinding it to 2 per cent on 65 mesh, and effecting a high recovery of the copper at the lowest possible cost were the pri

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    33. Ore Deposits in the Central San Juan Mountains, Colorado

    By Thomas A. Steven

    Most mineralized areas in the central San Juan Mountains, Colorado, are associated with the youngest subsidence structures in a large volcanic cauldron complex that formed concurrently with eruption o

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Guide for Buying Domestic Muscovite Mica

    By Blandford C. Burgess

    Mica is an orchid among minerals. It is formed in pegmatites, one of the most bizarre of igneous formations, and is exceeded by few other minerals in the perfection it may attain as to size, color, an

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Opening the Pyne Mine of the Woodward Iron Co. (ab9142a2-82b7-4eec-8aa8-07bb2ff8fbab)

    By Beall, John V.

    THIS is not simply the story of how a water filled shaft was developed into a million-ton- a-year producing mine in the space of four critical years, although it is reason enough for telling it, but i

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Entertains the Coal Division.

    By AIME AIME

    THE first fall meeting of the new Coal Division started on time on Thursday morning, Sept. 11, at Pittsburgh, with Paul Sterling of the Anthracite Section presiding and over a hundred members and gues

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Discussion of Session Three

    By AIME AIME

    I would like to ask Bob Merrill whether he considers that horizontal concave curvature of a slope has any stabilizing effect, such as Jenike 1 suggested several years ago. The stabilizing effect i

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Rare Metals and Minerals - Splitting of Uranium Atom Mort Important Development of the Year

    By Zay Jeffries

    A SURVEY of rare metals and minerals for the past year places uranium as one of two partners, the other being the neutron, in what historians will probably say is the greatest discovery in physics at

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Production Engineering Becoming Increasingly Efficient

    By A. W. WALKER

    All branches of production engineering showed steady and definite progress during 1941. Most of it has been of the slower and more conservative type rather than the sensational. To a large degree the

    Jan 1, 1942