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  • AIME
    Why The Mine Injury Picture Is Out Of Focus

    By Leo Greenberg

    As one of its functions, the U.S. Bureau of Mines gathers and analyzes mine accident data, and then publishes annual reports on work injury experience in the various segments of the minerals industry-

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Cortez Gold Mines - Gold Acres Mine Site - Lander County, Nevada

    Cortez Gold Mines operated a conventional 2,100 mtpd (2, 300 stpd) cyanidation plant until the 5 million ton ore body was worked out in 1973. (See Gold and Silver Cyanidation Plant Practice by F. W. M

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    Institute Policy On Controversial Matters (6edeb417-1c81-4246-a361-d71b03d5a90c)

    At its meeting on February 21, 1933, the Board of Directors passed the following resolution defining and expressing the policy of the Institute with respect to official participation or action in cont

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - A Statistical Theory of Fracture (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2218)

    By J. C. Fisher, J. H. Hollomon

    The fundamental problem concerning the fracture of both crystalline and noncrystalline solids is the divergence between the actua1 and the theorcticallY computed fracture stresses; the stress required

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Symposium: Effect of Multiaxial Stresses on Metals - A Statistical Theory of Fracture (Metals Tech., Aug. 1947, T. P. 2218)

    By J. H. Hollomon, J. C. Fisher

    The fundamental problem concerning the fracture of both crystalline and noncrystalline solids is the divergence between the actua1 and the theorcticallY computed fracture stresses; the stress required

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    The Conservation of Coal in the United States

    By Edward W. Parker

    IF one is to place any credence at all in the reports published in the daily press, the subject of conservation has been a very lively topic of conversation during the past 60 days, and it does not ap

    Nov 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Top Slicing In Old Fills At El Bordo Mine, Mexico

    By R. J. Mechin

    TOP-SLICING was introduced in the Pachuca district in 1917 by T. C. Baker, at that time mine superintendent, of the Santa Gertrudis mine. There then existed 1200 ft. (365.7 m.) below the surface, lyin

    Jan 10, 1925

  • AIME
    Why Do Sons of Coal-Mining Men Avoid the Industry?

    By David R. Mitchell

    IF you are the owner of a mine, or a mine executive, or just an ordinary miner, and have a son about to go to college, do you urge him to take up mining engineering or do you try to dissuade him from

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Mineral Industries Improve

    By Arthur Notman

    YEAR ago, the Committee on Mineral Economics ventured to predict a more realistic attitude by the public toward the folly of seeking to have more by making less under the guidance of the Blue Eagle. A

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Anglo-American Oil Treaty -An Aid in Preserving Peace

    By George A. Miller

    OIL, the abundance of it in the hands of the Allies and the lack of it in the hands of the Axis, played a major role in winning World War II. It bids fair to implement the winning of the peace. In fac

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Italy's Drive for Mineral Self-Sufficiency

    By Charles Will Wright

    ITALY is by- far the poorest in mineral resources of the so-called great pou7ers of Europe. Before the World War this shortage was not so serious as the essential minerals that could not be mined dome

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    War and Postwar Problems of American Industry

    By JOHN R. SUMAN

    TONIGHT I want to speak of the current problems and the postwar difficulties facing American industry. American industry has done an outstanding job in adjusting its operations to wartime necessity. T

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    The Thriving Bootleg Anthracite Industry in Pennsylvania

    By George H. Jones

    NO STRANGER phenomenon exists in the American mining industry today than the so-called bootleg anthracite industry in Pennsylvania which now produces probably close to 15 per cent of the total hard co

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Boston and Keweenaw

    By J. Robert Van Peli

    IT was a strange but highly fruitful marriage-that union of hardy explorers, seeking the rich treasures of copper in the Lake Superior wilderness, with Boston's aristocracy of brains, capital, an

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Nonmetallic Minerals ? New Deposits, New Methods, and New Uses, for a Variety of Industrial Minerals

    By Oliver Bowles

    A NORTH CAROLINA miner dreamed that he found high-grade mica by excavating a certain corner of his mine. The next day he sank a hole on the exact spot and found mica of excellent quality. The dream ca

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Proceedings of the Pittsburgh Meeting

    THE hall of the Western Iron and Nail Associations having kindly been placed at the service of the Institute, the opening session was held at 3 o'clock, Tuesday afternoon, May 13th, with an atten

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    This Phosphate Industry of Ours

    By Chester A. Fulton

    SUPPLYING as it does a necessity for healthy animal and vegetable phosphate production is a most important industry. We human beings also are animal as this war so surely proves. Unlike many other ele

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Superorganizing Professional Engineers

    By A. B. Parsons

    AN often repeated criticism of the profession of engineering is that it is as a whole it lacks solidarity. organization, co-ordination, and leadership. Significantly, the critic, are all engineers. Ot

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Research Problems in Institute's Field Listed

    By W. M. Corse

    AS THE outstanding contribution of the Committee on Correlation of Research of the Institute of Metals Division for 1932, may be mentioned the publication of Bureau of Mines Information Circular 6637,

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    A New Colorimeter for the Determination of Carbon in Steel

    By Charles H. White

    METHODS in colorimetry are based on the assumption that the intensity of the color of a definite volume of solution is directly proportional to the quantity of the color-producing substance' pres

    Sep 1, 1906