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  • AIME
    Careful Attention Given to Custom Shippers

    By F. X. Meyer

    THE United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company maintains an ore-purchasing department for procurement of custom tonnages of milling and smelting ores and concentrates for treatment at its Midv

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    The War's Impact on the Mineral Industry of Washington

    By Milnor Roberts

    WAR struck the mineral industry of Washington with cross currents that produced a peculiar result. The State's production of coal, industrial minerals, and metals for 1941, valued at $28,507,282,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Creep-Rupture by Vacancy Condensation

    By E. S. Machlin

    The possibility that formation of voids under creep-rupture conditions may take place by the condensation of vacancies has been investigated theoretically. It has been concluded that nucleation of voi

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    The Beginning of Mining and Metallurgical Education in the New World

    By F. R. Morral

    In 1964, mining education in the United States will celebrate a 100th anniversary-that of the founding of our first school of mines at Columbia University. Prior to that, curricula leading to degrees

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    The Constitution of Mattes Produced in Copper-Smelting

    By R. C. Philp, Allan Gibb

    INTRODUCTION. THE term matte is applied to smelting-products so extremely diverse in composition and physical properties that it appears impossible to devise any generic formula to represent, chemica

    Nov 1, 1905

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Mining Men Meet

    By AIME AIME

    T HE Mining Methods Committee held its initial meeting* on Tuesday afternoon, with F. W. Bradley in the chair and W. Y. Westervelt as vice- chairman. The first paper to be presented was "A Plea for a

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    The Enrichment Of Gold And Silver Veins

    By Walter Harvey Weed

    INTRODUCTION. IN a previous paper upon the enrichment of mineral veins by later metallic sulphides,† the writer has shown that certain masses of rich ores, such as are found in many mines, either n

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
    Shaft Sinking at Texas Salt Mines

    By M. TAYLOR

    AT Grand Saline, some 65 miles east of Dallas, the Morton Salt Co. of Chicago has for some years operated a brine pumping and evaporation plant on a salt dome. They recently drilled trial holes to obt

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Papers - Mining Geology - Occurrence of Quicksilver Orebodies (With Discussion)

    By C. N. Schuette

    The material presented in this paper has been gathered by the writer during a long and varied experience on matters pertaining to the quicksilver industry. During the past 18 years he has visited prac

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Coal Industry Must Institute Research

    By A. W. Gauger

    SMELTING of iron ore, manufacture of steel, and the fabrication of ferrous metal products are all processes that require energy. Charcoal was adequate, to supply this energy for the relatively simple

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Magnesium: Reviewing Its Technology of Production and Use

    By John A. Gann

    WITHIN a very few years magnesium has sprung from oblivion, from classification as a technically unknown, little appreciated, and expensive material to front-page importance in many fields of engineer

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Appendix - The Origin of Metalliferous Deposits.*

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    THERE are about sixty bodies which chemists call elements ; the simplest forms of matter which they have been able to extract from the rocky crust of our earth, its waters, and its atmosphere. These s

    Jan 1, 1873

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Heat Treatment of Cast Steel (with Discussion)

    By Arvid E. Nissen, Knox Taylor, John H. Hall

    Some months ago one of the authors was asked to write a paper on the heat treatment of steel castings that would be more comprehensive than other matter he had published; this is an attempt to present

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Geology of the Clifton and Parish Ore Deposits

    By A. E. WALKER

    SOME eighty years have elapsed since the discovery of the Clifton magnetite deposit. For a few years about the time of the Civil War it was mined for iron ore. most of which was smelted on the propert

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    World's Deepest Oil Well a Test of Equipment and Drilling Methods

    By A. H. Bell

    DEEPEST hole in the earth, and deepest producing oil well in the world-such is well No. K.C.L. A-2, of the Continental. Oil Co., completed on April 12 in the San Joaquin valley about four miles west o

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    What is Steel?

    By Albert Sauveur

    As THE years go by, names of distinguished metallurgists will be added to the list of Henry Marion Howe lecturers, and now and then an illustrious one, for to be chosen to deliver the Howe lecture wil

    Jan 5, 1924

  • AIME
    The Drift Of Things (291136cb-718c-4940-9091-e31593d222b9)

    By John V. Beall

    With some difficulty we framed the picture of the village on the mountain getting in the railroad bridge and tunnel at the base. It was a charming scene of red-tile roofs on a green mountain in the go

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Method of Collecting Flue-Dust at Erns on the Lahn

    By T. Egleston

    The importance of condensing the gases which escape from furnaces so as to save both the fine particles of ore carried off mechanically and those which are volatilized, has for a long time occupied th

    Jan 1, 1883