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  • AIME
    Papers - Preparation - Maintenance of a Coal Cleaning Plant (T.P. 2379, Coal Tech., May 1948, with discussion)

    By Ralph M. Hunter

    Until recent years, maintenance of surface coal handling facilities was a relatively simple task. Equipment consisted principally of conveyors, screens and crushers of comparatively simple constructio

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Heralding the Nonmetallic Mineral Age

    By C. C. Whittier

    CIVILIZATION'S PROGRESS, which has multiplied man's comforts, conveniences, a n d happiness, is based upon the extensive employment of natural minerals and sources of energy. Mineral resourc

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Petroleum Industry, 1930

    By C. V. Millikan

    THE year 1930 in the petroleum industry has been characterized by the establishment of large potential production of crude oil. This has resulted in closer cooperation between companies by proration a

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Engineering Problems in Atomic Energy for Industrial Application

    By J. A. Hutcheson

    NO one questions that it is technically possible to achieve the controlled release of atomic energy in a form that can be converted into heat or electricity. However, before this is actually an accomp

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Virginia Beach Paper - Discussion of Dr. Waldo's paper on aluminum-bronze (see p. 525)

    President Howe : It is not so clear to me that the facts which Dr. Waldo brings forward really argue that the nature of the combination between copper and aluminum differs from that of the combination

    Jan 1, 1895

  • AIME
    Trade Route from the World Ports to the Midland of North America

    By W. L. Saunders

    THE world's greatest producing area is, geographically, in the midland region of North America about the Great Lakes. This area, with but one- third of the nation's population, produces, wit

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    The Engineers' Memorial

    HOW the Engineers' Memorial clock and carillon at Louvain has impressed the people of that city is indicated by the following letter sent by the Secretary of the University of Louvain to the Secr

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Mill and Metallurgical Practice of the Nipissing Mining Co., Ltd., Cobalt, Ont., Canada (with Discussion)

    By James Johnston

    Synopsis.—A description of the working of the mills of this company and the metallurgical practice in vogue, by which a remarkably complex silver ore, averaging 54 oz. of silver per ton (run-of-mine o

    Jan 1, 1915

  • 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
  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-General - Equilibrium Ratios for Reservoir Studies

    By J. N. Sicking, F. H. Brinkman

    A new method for obtaining equilibrium vaporization ratios (K-values) for reservoir fluids has been developed and tested. By application of the method, complex experimental measurements of liquid and

  • AIME
    Metal Mining - Some Features of Current Mining Practices at Kerr-Addison Gold Mines, Ltd.

    By W. S. Row

    This mine is operated at 4000 to 4500 tons daily through a single shaft, with one rock hoist and one senice hoist. Latest shaft construction is concrete with wooden dividers. Economics of drifters and

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Aluminum-beryllium Alloys (with Discussion)

    By W. L. Fink, R. S. Archer

    This paper describes results obtained on aluminum-beryllium alloys and aluminum-beryllium-copper alloys in the preparation of which aluminum of 99.95 per cent. purity was used. The constitution and st

  • AIME
    Sound Steel Ingots And Rails

    Discussion of the paper of GEORGE K. BURGESS and SIR ROBERT A. HADFIELD, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 98, February, 1915, pp. 455 to 468. ALBERT SAUV

    Jan 5, 1915

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Recrystallization of Cold-Worked Alpha Brass on Annealing (with Discussion)

    By Arthur Phillips, C. H. Mathewson

    During the past year considerable work dealing with the mechanical properties and microstructure following the anneal under uniform condi-tions of certain types of commercial rolled brass has been don

    Jan 1, 1916

  • AIME
    Possibilities of Research in Nonmetallic Minerals

    By Dozier Fircley

    SOME nonmetallic minerals and their products, such as portland cement, common brick and hollow tile, sand, gravel, crushed rock, vitrified salt-glaze clay pipe, and the like, are a necessity in every

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Recent Developments in the Physical Metallurgy of Copper and Copper Alloys, and in Equipment and Practice

    By W. D. France, H. l. Burghoff

    FABRICATORS of copper and copper alloys have contended with the problems of reconversion during the past year in endeavoring to return to the full-scale production that is demanded of them. The proble

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation In 1964 – Basic Science

    By F. T. Davis

    Many contributors have added to the fund of knowledge in the basic sciences related to mineral dressing during the past year. During 1964, the French edition of the Proceedings of the VIth Internation

    Jan 2, 1965

  • AIME
    Papers - Thermodynamic Properties of Compounds of Magnesium and Group IVB Elements

    By P. Beardmore, B. W. Howlett, B. D. Lichter, M. B. Bever

    The heats of formation at 273°K of the compounds Mg2Ge, Mg2sn, and Mg2b, the heats of fusion and melting points of Mg2Sn and Mg2Pb, and the heats of solution of magnesium, germanium, and lead in liqui

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Developments in Concentration of Copper Ores

    By G. L. Oldright

    THE metallurgist is familiar with the rapid development of concentration -by flotation and smelting in the reverberatory in recent years, brought 'about chiefly by the exhaustion of' bodies

    Jan 1, 1925