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  • AIME
    With My Husband in Soviet Russia

    By Sallie McCabe Johnson

    LIFE IN RUSSIA for the foreign woman is hard. It is up to her whether her days are spent in tearful longing for ironic or whether she :hakes the real effort to ferret out the interesting or amusing si

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Consolidation Coal Co. Finds - Thorough Study of Accidents Necessary for Safe Mine Operation

    By F. E. Bedale

    STUDY of several severe mine explosions that occurred during the winter of 1907 led to the belief that coal dust was a definite explosion hazard. The Consolidation Coal Co. was a pioneer in the early

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Employment of Mining Engineering Graduates in the United States

    By William B. Plank

    RECENT interest in the character of employment of young mining engineering graduates has been stimulated by my studies, during the past ten years, of student enrollment and employment of graduates of

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Editorial - Don't Let It Die

    THERE have been two important accomplishments of the Truman administration; the Hoover Commission report on inefficiency and waste in government and the report of the Paley Commission on the natural r

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Requisites of Successful Mine Operation

    By C. W. Hall

    MINE executives, as a rule, have always been willing to adopt new ideas of operation, or to listen to proposals which might increase the effectiveness of their enterprise, more especially so if they c

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Salt Resources Of West Virginia

    By Paul H. Price

    The history of the salt industry in West Virginia dates back nearly two hundred years; however, the history of salt as an important raw material for the chemical industry is much more recent. The ea

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Almaden World?s Greatest Mercury Mine

    By Evan Bennett

    ALMADEN is Arabic for "the mine." The definite article is properly used, for no mercury mine in the world compares with it for richness and volume of ore, produced and potential. After more than twent

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Nickel-Bearing Alloys in the Production and Refining of Petroleum

    By Byron B. Morton

    NICKEL-BEARING alloys are associated with petroleum in the fields of exploration, production, and refining. In the first- named field the geologist of today makes use of such instruments as the seismo

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    The Valuation of Oil and Natural Gas Properties as Distinguished from Mines

    By Lyon F. Terry

    ACCEPTED current practice for A the valuation of mineral property is based upon Hoskold's theory and valuation tables first published in 1877, and popularized by Herbert Hoover's "Principles

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Ground Subsidence at Sour Lake, Texas.

    By E. H. Sellards

    ON Oct. 9, 1929, a sink formed in the Sour Lake salt dome oil field in Texas, and on Oct. 12 a second smaller sink formed at the north margin of the first. The purpose of this paper is to give such ob

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    The Extraordinary Faulting at the Berlin Mine, Nevada

    By ELLSIVOKTH DAGGETT

    THE Berlin gold quartz mine is situated in Nye county, Nevada, on the west flank of the Shoshone range, about 40 miles south and 30 miles west from the town of Austin, the county-seat of Lander county

    Mar 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Effect Of Humidity On Mine-Explosions.

    By Carl Scholz

    DURING November And December, 1907, Four Serious Mine-explosions Occurred In The Appalachian Coal-Field, Which Resulted In The Loss Of Nearly A Thousand Lives And Caused An Enormous . Damage To Proper

    Jan 7, 1908

  • AIME
    Grinding at Tennessee Copper-Progress Report

    By J. F. Myers, F. M. Lewis

    The paper reports the development of a large, slow speed ball mill closed circuited with a hydroscillator. This increased grinding efficiency 28 pct over conventional units.

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    PART XII – December 1967 – Papers - Kinetics of Silver Cementation on Copper in Perchloric Acid and Alkaline Cyanide Solutions

    By E. A. von Hahn, T. R. lngraham

    Cementation rates ulere studied by rotating an elec-tropolished or etched copper strip in aqueous solutions, of either perchloric acid or alkaline cyanide, containing silver ions. The rates of cemen

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Drilling Selection Requires Value Judgments - Principles Of Drilling

    The selection of a particular machine for production drilling is the most critical drill evaluation the pit engineer is called upon to make. It is a true engineering design problem requiring value jud

    Jan 10, 1967

  • AIME
    The Equipment of a Laboratory for Metallurgical Chemistry in a Technical School

    By C. H. White

    Discussion of a Paper by Mr. C. H. White, read at the Atlantic City Meeting, February, 1904. (Annual Meeting, February, 1005.) ARTHUR JARMAN, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (communication to the

    Mar 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Past and Future Education of Engineers

    By C. E. MacQuigg

    BY and large the education of the engineer has been conservative and the reasons for this are obvious. Quite properly it has been a tradition of engineering education that facts and not fancies must b

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Mineral Education in 1930

    By William B. Plank

    THE growing dependence of our vast industrial civilization (:n mineral products demands today, as never before, the highest technical skill in those who produce these product-;. That the duty of train

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    The Methane Detector as an Aid to Mine Safety

    By Arthur Glance

    MINE safety is of the utmost importance to all operators and most operations have a safety organization, or safety inspector, whose job it is to be continually on the alert to detect and correct the h

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Discussions - Of Mr. Campbell's Paper on The Influence of Carbon, Phosphorus, Manganese and Sulphur on the Tensile Strength of Open-Hearth Steel (see Trans., xxxv., 772)

    Mansfield MERRIMAN,Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa. (communication to the Secretary*):—The formulas established by Mr. Campbell require the use of tables in order to take into account the influ

    Jan 1, 1906