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  • AIME
    Board of Directors Dines and Meets

    By AIME AIME

    IN furtherance of the policy of acquainting those members of the Institute who live at a distance from New York with all the details of administration, the thirty delegates sent by the local sections

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    The Development and Use of High-Speed Tool-Steel.

    By J. M. GLEDHILL

    IT would doubtless have been felt by many but a few years back that there was little left to be said on the subject of crucible tool-steel, and that something akin to finality had been arrived at in i

    Mar 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Construction

    By T. A. Rickard

    The writing that is effective is woven with a fine texture into an agreeable pattern; it is free from knots, loose threads, and stray fluff. The instrument that weaves this literary fabric, whether it

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Should Minera1 Indications by Geophysical Prospecting Be Equivalent to Discovery for Location of Mining Claims and to Assessment Work?

    By AIME AIME

    THE second session on geophysical prospecting at the February meeting of the Institute was a discussion of the mining law and the bearing of the new method of search on location of claims and assessme

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Occurrence of Bentonite in Southern Arkansas

    By George Branner

    THERE is no record of the commercial production of bentonite as such in Arkansas up to the present although fuller's earth has been. mined intermittently in the state1 from 1891 to 1922. Very nea

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    New York Talcs, Their Geological Features, Mining, Milling, and Uses

    By E. J. ENGEL

    The New York talc deposits of commercial importance are in St. Lawrence and Lewis counties, in the northwest Adirondack Mountains (Fig 1). All of the deposits are of pre-Cambrian age and occur within

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Some General Problems of the Mineral Industry

    By Thomas T. Read

    THE official title of our topic for today is "Resources of Metals and Other Strategic Minerals," but in accepting the invitation to open this discussion I claimed the privilege of being allowed to tal

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Review of Modern Cyanide Practice in United States and Mexico

    By S. F. Shaw

    Tars paper is a review of the principal details of cyanide practice in several of the modern plants in America, mainly during the year 1908. Two of the mills, the Goldfield Consolidated and the Vets,

    Jul 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - On the Origin of Tertiary Creep in an Aluminum Alloy

    By F. N. Rhines, A. S. Nemy

    The mode of high-temperature tertiary creep of 523-0 aluminum alloy was found to be strongly stress dependent. The occurrence of necking and/or fissures during tertiary creep exhibited a sequence with

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    "Effects of Petroleum Tax Design upon Exploration and Development"

    By Thomas R. Stauffer

    The principle that conventional schemes for taxing petroleum or mineral resources are "inefficient" is illustrated using simulation calculations tested against an "ideal" system. Inefficiency is def

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    A Sea-Level Canal At Panama-A Study Of Its Desirability And Feasibility.

    By Henry G. Granger

    NOTHING in this paper is to be understood as even suggesting a moment's suspension of the splendid work now going forward on the Isthmus of Panama, except so far as it is related to the proposed

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Alaska Juneau Deep Level Mining

    By P. R. Bradley

    NO thought had been given to deep level mining at the Alaska Juneau mine prior to 1930, but in that year a prospect winze was started and continued for 1000 ft. vertically below the main haulage or ad

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Velocity of Galena and Quartz Falling in Water

    By ROBERT. RICHARDS

    I. INTRODUCTION The object of this paper is to enlarge the field of settling velocities treated by me in my former papers, Close Sizing Before Jigging, and Sorting Before Sizing.' There seemed n

    May 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Lead Smelting During the Last Five Years

    By W. Spencer Reid

    ALTHOUGH there have been some developments during the last five years which have had far- reaching and important bearing on lead smelting, it cannot be said that any basic principles of pyrometal-lu

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Evidence Of Formation Of Copper Ferrite From Reaction Between Cuprous Oxide And Copper Reverberatory Slags

    By Pei-Yung Huang, Carle R. Hayward

    IN order to understand more fully the actual state of copper lost in copper reverberatory slags, a systematic study on the various reactions between certain metallurgically important copper compounds

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Activation of Sphalerite with Lead Ions in the Presence of Zinc Salts

    By P. H. Metzger, D. W. Fuerstenau

    The activation of sphalerite was found to occur at a much lower rate with Pb++ then with Cut++ or Ag+. To prevent activation with Pb++, the ratio [m in solution must approximate 103. An example is g

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Howe Memorial Lecture

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Gaseous Decomposition-Products Of Black Powder, With Special Reference To The Use Of Black Powder In Coal-Mines.

    By Clinton M. Young

    (Pittsburg Meeting, March, 1910.) I. INTRODUCTION. THE experiments herein. described were carried on in 1908-9 . by the State Geological Survey of Kansas. Some months before taking up work on black

    Aug 1, 1910

  • AIME
    Engineering Contributions to Government

    By AIME AIME

    T HE appointment of Herbert Hoover to the portfolio of Commerce in the President's Cabinet is to engineers the fulfillment of a long deferred hope to have an engineer in high political office and

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Impurities and Structure on the Tensile Transition Temperature of Chromium

    By B. C. Allen, R. I. Jaffee, D. J. Maykuth

    Wrought unalloyed iodide chromium, containing 39 to 95 ppm total interstitials, has a tensile transition temperature of —15°C. Re crystallizing at 1100°C causes the transition to rise to 90° to 390°C,

    Jan 1, 1963