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  • AIME
    Available Brass And Bronze Ingots For Implements Of War

    By William Romanoff

    As you are no doubt aware, virgin copper, tin and zinc are strategic metals today and little, if any, is available in the manufacture of brass and bronze ingots. The source of alloys used in the manuf

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Wilkes-Barre Meeting This Month

    By AIME AIME

    PLANS for the Semi-centennial Meeting have almost reached completion, although in any undertaking of such magnitude a few changes are always to be expected at the last moment. As worked out up to the

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Saskatchewan's Industrial Minerals

    By A. J. Williams

    THE province of Saskatchewan, situated in the center of the Great Plains region of Canada, has, like most prairie areas, an essentially agricultural economy. Most of its population of about 860,000 is

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Extractive Mettallurgy Division - Preparation of Uranium Metals by Fused Salt Electrolysis.

    By W. C. Lilliendahl, G. Meister

    Uranium metal with a purity of about 99.9 pct was produced on a large scale by fused salt electrolysis with a material efficiency of about 90 pct. The material efficiency depends mainly on bath compos

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    The Outlook for the Coal Industry

    By Howard N. Eavenson

    TWO months ago, just after the coal code hearing in Washington, one of our leading liberal weeklies printed a study of the coal industry made by an economist in the Administration, and on the outside

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Hot-Blast Smelting for the Elimination of Arsenic, Antimony, Lead and Zinc from Copper-Mattes, and for the Production of Lead

    By S. E. Bretherton

    Mr. AllaW Gibb, of Mount Perry, Queensland, Australia, in an interesting and instructive paper,* describes fully the great difficulties metallurgists encounter in seeking to produce marketable copper

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Publicity for Engineers

    By JAMES H. McGRAW

    P UBLZCLTY and engineers do not mix. In the very words of my subject, there is an apparent contradiction. In the past, publicity has been abhorrent to the engineer. It seems to be true that the engine

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
  • AIME
    The Coalescence Process for Producing Semifabricated Oxygen-free Copper

    By John Tyssowski

    IN 1925, Harry Howard Stout, then metallurgist for Phelps Dodge Corporation, while investigating the cleaning of cathode copper by various gases at elevated temper-atures below the melting point of th

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Mine-Survey Notes.

    By George W. Riter

    (Canal zone meeting, November, 1910.) A DISTINGUISHED engineer, the active head of a large mining company, has said that surveying attains the dignity of a profession only in the hands of a few men-t

    Apr 1, 1911

  • AIME
    A Singular Mission for a Mining Engineer

    By K. S. TWITCHEEL

    THE different lines leading out from the vocation of a mining engineer are,' perhaps, the most' varied of all the professions. The expedition sent by Charles R. Crane of New York 'as a

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Economies in a Small Coal Mine & The Behavior of Stibnite in an Oxidizing Roast

    By Herbert A. Everest

    Discussion of the paper of HERBERT A. EVEREST presented at the New York meeting, February, 1916, and printed in Bulletin No. 109, January, 1916, pp. 165 to 167. NEWELL G. ALFORD, Earlington, Ky. (com

    Jan 5, 1916

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Gold-Production in California

    By Charles G. Yale

    A few years ago somebody connected with one of those self-constituted bodies of unofficial character, like a Chamber of Commerce, Board of Trade, or State Development Board, started a catch-phrase ref

    Jan 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Mining Education

    By Charles H. Fulton

    ONE of the events of note in mineral industry education circles during the year was the summer school for engineering teachers, devoted to mining and metallurgical engineering, which was conducted by

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Symposia - Symposuim on Determination of Hydrogen in Steel - Determination of Hydrogen in Steel Sampling and Analysis by Vacuum Extraction

    By R. M. Scafe

    Although hydrogen has been intensively studied in its relation to steel quality, the methods of sampling and determinations are still open to question. It is true that various procedures have been pro

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    The Life Of Crucible Steel Furnaces.

    By John Hall

    THE recently announced run of three years, nine months and eleven days made by a. crucible steel melting furnace of the Columbia Tool Steel Co., which is claimed as a. world's record, brings forc

    Jan 9, 1913

  • AIME
    A Study Of Engineering Education

    This study of engineering education arose out of the action of a joint committee on engineering education, representing the principal engineering societies. The committee had gathered so much material

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Acknowledgments

    The editorial expenses for the preparation of the manuscript of the second edition, as for the first, were provided by grants of the Engineering Foundation and the Open Hearth Steel Committee of the I

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Papers - - Produciton - Domestic- Oil and gas Developments in Indiana 1934

    By J. P. Kerr, W. N. Logan

    Lack of reliable and detailed information on many of the older fields in Indiana has necessitated the use of x and y in many instances. Even in the younger fields many data were lacking. It was though

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Relations between Government Surveys and the Mining Industry - Public Geological Surveys and Geological Education

    By M. N. Short

    It is almost self-evident that the student of geology depends for his education in geology only in small measure upon his own observation. His chief sources of information are lectures and personal in

    Jan 1, 1935