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  • AIME
    Some Aspects of Our Wasting Assets - As Our Mineral Resources Diminish We Will Become More Economy Conscious

    By F. W. Willard

    VIEWING with alarm is a preoccupation not exclusively the habit of the political spellbinder. In good faith many of our mineral technologists have been and are genuinely alarmed over the prodigal cons

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Calico Mining District

    By F. B. WEEKS

    I HAVE chosen for my subject a mining district which in an article published four years ago I referred to in the following words: "One of the un- usual anomalies of mining development and history is t

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Physical Data Of Igneous Emanation.

    By Blamey Stevens

    (San Francisco Meeting, October, 1911.) My previous paper is entitled, The Laws of Igneous Emanation Pressure. The present paper lays no claim to the exactitude and completeness of a law, since it is

    Apr 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Performance Tests of an Experimental Installation of Cyclone Thickeners at the Shamrock Mine

    By T. Fraser, R. L. Sutherland

    Under a cooperative agreement between United States Bureau of Mines and the Truax-Traer Coal Company, some operating-scale experiments have been made with the cyclone thickener in the preparation plan

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    The Moscow Institute Urges Soviet Union To Adopt A New Plan For Mining Education

    By Roman Y. Poderny, Vladimir V. Rjevskii

    In the USSR, the Moscow Institute of Radio Electronics tronics and Mining Electro-Mechanics (MIRGEM) has started what it hopes will become a nationwide movement to educate mining students in the preci

    Jan 9, 1966

  • AIME
    Sixtieth Anniversary Celebration at Wilkes-Barre

    By AIME AIME

    THE growth of the spirit of progress and mutual aid which motivated the founders of the Institute sixty years ago in Wilkes-Barre was vigorously demonstrated at the sixtieth anniversary meeting held t

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Economic Solution of After-war Problems

    By Walter Renton Ingalls

    IN SEVERAL papers and addresses during the past two years, I have dwelled upon some of the economic consequences of the war. The fundamental thought that I have sought to convey is that the world beca

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Ground Movement and Subsidence - Notable Studies in the Kolar Gold Field and at a Pittsburgh Coal Mine

    By George S. Rice

    GROUND movement and subsidence is an important matter from several points of view and it is regrettable that more papers have not been written on this subject in the past year. Damage may be done to s

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Geology and Mineral Deposits of Costa Rica ' s South-Central Osa Peninsula Placer Gold District

    By Stanley W. Ivosevic

    The South-Central Osa Peninsula produced around 30,000 kg (100,000 troy oz) of gold since prehistoric times. Gold freed by erosion from quartz lodes in the Mesozoic Nicoya ophiolite complex was reconc

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Results at Government Oil-Shale Testing Plant

    By M. J. GAVEN

    COMING over from the plant on the Denver and Rio Grande yesterday afternoon I was an interested listener to a smoking-room conversation that had to do with the experimental plant near Rifle. The peopl

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Bridgeport Paper - Discussion of Prof. Kemp's paper on the Lancaster Gap nickel-mine (see p. 620)

    E. E. Olcott, New York City: Prof. Kemp's valuable description of the Lancaster Gap mine is in line with many other able contributions on the origin of mineral deposits that the Institute has lat

    Jan 1, 1895

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Active

    By AIME AIME

    THE Tuesday afternoon session", H. A. Bedworth chairman and T. S. Fuller, vice-chairman, was opened with D. J. McAdam, Jr.'s paper entitled "The Influence of Cyclic Stress on Corrosion." This pap

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Qualifying Engineers for High Executive Positions

    By H. A. Guess

    AT the outset, said Mr. Guess, I may say that although I believe the present engineering courses in the various colleges and universities could be arranged to give the student within the same time lim

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Some Causes and Cures of Unemployment

    By Herbert Hoover

    YOUR committee asks that I speak today on the relations of the engineering profession to public affairs. That takes in a lot of ground. This being a cheerful occasion, I will assume that I should excl

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Electrical Dewatering of Phosphate Tailing

    By E. C. Houston

    The phosphate ores mined in middle Tennessee typically consist of granular rock phosphate particles disseminated in a clayey matrix. In the TVA plant near Columbia, Tenn., the phosphate ore is mined,

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Clear Fused Quartz - Unique Nieder Process Makes Slugs From Quartz Powder Mechanically

    By Raymond O. Ladoo

    FUSED quartz is a glass made by the fusion of nearly pure silica. Some confusion in terminology exists but in the trade today "fused quartz" generally refers to the perfectly transparent colorless pro

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Sponge Iron and Its Relation to the Steel Industry

    By Edward P. Barrett

    DURING the past few years numerous references have been made in the technical press and Bureau of Mines Bulletin 270 to sponge iron' and so-called "direct metal" processes. The idea has been prev

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    The Vein-System of the Standard Mine, Bodie, Cal.

    By R. Gilman Brown

    INTRODUCTION. MINES are interesting by reason of what they have done for man, or of what has been done for them by nature. Not all are interesting on both scores. Many profitable mines are commonplac

    Jul 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Oxidation And Enrichment At Ducktown, Tenn.

    By Geoffrey Gilbert

    A study of specimens shows that the key to both oxidation and enrichment at Duck-town is the behavior of pyrrhotite, which is in part dissolved and in part replaced by marcasite. Enrichment takes plac

    Jan 3, 1924

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Cracks in Aluminum-alloy Castings (with Discussion)

    By R.J. Anderson

    Roughly, a crack in a casting may be considered, for the moment, to be due to fracture of the alloy resulting from the stress set up by the contraction in volume on passing from the liquid to the soli

    Jan 1, 1923