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Lead and Its Uses in the Mineral Industries
By Felix Edgar Wormser
JUST as the ancients used the products of their crude mining endeavors to fashion tools with which to make digging easier, so today mining enterprises are dependent upon the very metals they mine for
Jan 1, 1935
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Industrial Nonmetallic Minerals
By G. W. Josephson
JUDGING by the progressive atmosphere prevailing in the nonmetallic mineral industries during the past year, postwar conditions were healthful though inflationary. Demand for most industrial mineral
Jan 1, 1948
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Copper Mining and Prospecting in Northern Rhodesia, Africa
By H. G. HYMER
B ECAUSE of its remote geographical position and inaccessibility, little is generally known of the mining and prospecting in Northern Rhodesia. In this rather new and promising region, the development
Jan 1, 1929
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Biographical Notice of Benjamin West Frazier, Jr., D.Sc.
By Edward H. Williams
IN the middle of the eighteenth century John Frazier and wife, Sarah Ingraham, removed from Boston, Mass., to Philadelphia, Pa., where he was held in such esteem that we find him one of the Committee
Sep 1, 1905
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Gold and Silver Operations in Australia and Adjacent Lands
By M. W. BERNEWITZ
AUSTRALIANS and New Zealanders, whose countries have respectively yielded gold to the value of £666,000,000 and £96,000,000, are taking full advantage of the current high prices for that metal. There
Jan 1, 1934
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Nonferrous Physical Metallurgy.
By AIME AIME
WAR undoubtedly accelerates metallurgical progress, although its most obvious effect is a tremendous waste of materials. The necessity for restrictions in normal uses of metals results in a search for
Jan 1, 1943
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Who's Who in Mineral Engineering 1977 - SME Membership Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME
Who's Who in Mineral Engineering 1977 - SME Membership Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME
Jan 7, 1977
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Iron and Steel - High-Tensile Low-Alloy Steels Make Rapid Advance - Quality the Keynote in the Industry
By M. J. R. Morris
THE year 1939 has seen the iron and steel industry driving for efficiency with unabated zeal. "Efficiency" is here used in the sense of enabling the customer to do more with less, either supplying him
Jan 1, 1940
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Opportunities for Mining and Metallurgical Engineers in the Rock Products Industries
By Nathan C. Rockwood
WHILE mining engineers have been searching in far corners of the country and of the world for hidden wealth there has grown up around us in nearly every city great wealth-producing mines calling for t
Jan 1, 1924
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Augustus Braun Kinzel - Director, A.I.M.E.
By AIME
DURING the happy and peaceful years between the Treaty of Versailles and the third New Deal, metallurgy became one of the most cosmopolitan of the sciences. Any metallurgist can name some twenty or th
Jan 1, 1946
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Sherritt Gordon - Nickel's Unconventional Winner
The growth and influence of Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd. in the nickel producing industry has been quite phenomenal. Although the company's Lynn Lake deposit in Manitoba was actually dis- covered i
Jan 10, 1968
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Coal Output Equals That of 1934 - Producers Actively Meet Competition - Introduction
By J. T. Ryan
FIGURES for the first 11 months of 1935 indicate that the total coal production of the United States for 1935 will be approximately 416,000,000 tons, or almost identical with the production figures fo
Jan 1, 1936
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Principles of Fuel Beds
By P. Nicholls
THOUGH the burning of fuels extends far back into antiquity, and though fuel beds are the most common and widely distributed example of chemical actions and engineering practice, there has been little
Jan 1, 1935
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Metals in Modern Society - Fundamental Research on Metals and Alloys a Must
By Cyril Stanley Smith
ARCHEOLOGISTS, by use of the terms Bronze Age and Iron Age, indicate that metals have in the past determined the character of civilization. The relatively simple discovery by a primitive metallurgist
Jan 1, 1946
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Reminiscences of Metallurgists and Plants in the San Francisco Area
By ABBOT A. HANKS
WHEN gold was discovered in California, and San Francisco grew almost over night from a handful of people to many thousands, one of the first difficulties experienced was the lack of money. Gold dust
Jan 1, 1931
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Rare Metals Becoming More Common
By Paul M. Tyler, Colin G. Fink
THE field of rare metals is so broad that progress can be reported upon many important fronts. Not satisfied with the 92 elements that Mendeleeff and his followers have accepted as legitimate, scient
Jan 1, 1935
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Present Problems in the Training of Mining Engineers
By DR. SAMUEL B. CHRISTY
? THE man is always greater than his work.? The training of the men who are to develop the mineral resources of the world is the most important problem connected with mining engineering. It becomes ev
Sep 1, 1905
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Bibliography of Injuries to Vegetation by Furnace Gases
By Persifor Frazer
1. SMOKE PREVENTION. Report of Select Committee of House of Commons (1843). Nuisance considerably abated in Leeds (Wm. Backerd, July 13, 1843, 239 pages). A synoptic index, p. 211, gives, in alphabet
May 1, 1907
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Gold and World Trade
By James R. Finlay
SOMETIMES the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers appears to be a strictly technical society, and if so my paper should deal with the technical operations of finding and producing
Jan 1, 1933
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Professional Services (a8bdc18b-a8db-4c7c-9d81-571db874d37c)
[RALPH ADAIR Ore Dressing Consultant Bull Mtn. Rd., Asheville, N. C. Phone 4-1893 JAMES A. BARR Consulting Engineer Mt. Pleasant, Tennessee Washington, D.C. BEHRE DOLBEAR & COMPANY Consul
Jan 1, 1952