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  • AIME
    Papers - Metal Mining - Air Conditioning in Deep Mines (With Discussion)

    By R. W. Waterfill

    MANY existing ore deposits of valuable metals have been worked out in their upper surface levels and the continued productivity of these mines is dependent on their extension to greater depths in the

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Pillars of Coal

    By S. Harries Daddow

    THE INSUFFICIENCY OF PILLARS OF COAL FOR THE PURPOSES DESIGNED-THE FRUITFUL CAUSE OF DANGER, EXPENSE, AND WASTE-THE PROOF OF INSECURITY-SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLARS OF COAL-PILLARS AND PANELS COMPARED. P

    Jan 1, 1873

  • AIME
    Aircraft Steels

    By Albert Sauveur

    As director of the Division of Metallurgy of the Technical Section of the Air Service, American Expeditionary Forces, from August, 1917, to January, 1919, I devoted much time to the study of the steel

    Jan 9, 1919

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Use of Pulverized Coal as a Fuel for Metallurgical Furnaces (with Discussion)

    By H. R. Barnhurst

    It would be a difficult matter to trace from the beginning the very few improvements made in the burning of fuels prior to 1860. Donbtless the crossing of the sticks of wood in building a mood fire ea

    Jan 1, 1914

  • AIME
    PART XI – November 1967 - Papers - Enforced Fluid Motion and the Control of Grain Structures in Metal Castings

    By G. S. Cole, G. F. Bolling

    Fluid flow strongly influences ingl structure and the columnar -to-equaaxed transition. Artificial flow patterns siwzilar to the nuturul ones act to induce this transition, while dampening forces act

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Analysis of Factors that Limit the Production Rate and Coke Rate in the Iron Blast Furnace

    By W. O. Philbrook

    An engineering analysis indicates that the coke rate in present blast-furnace practice is set not by chemical or thermal needs but to give adequate charge permeability for economical driving rates. An

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Correlations Of Some Coke Properties With Blast-Furnace Operations

    By Hjalmar W. Johnson

    IT has long been accepted that blast-furnace practice varies to some degree with the coke used. While the qualities desirable in iron have been known for some time, the qualities in coke that produce

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Dispersing Properties Of Tanning Agents And Possibilities Of Their Use In Flotation Of Fine Minerals

    By G. Rinelli, A. M. Marabini

    A wide-ranging series of experiments has been carried out on value minerals (sphalerite, smithsonite and hematite) and gangue minerals (quartz and calcite) to assess the properties of various commerci

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    St. Louis Paper - Analysis of Oil-field Water Problems (with Discussion)

    By A. W. Ambrose

    The underground losses of oil exceed by hundreds of thousands of barrels all the oil that has been lost in storage, transportation, or refining. The quantity lost is, of course, indeterminate; but whe

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Correlation of Formations of Huronian Group in Michigan (with Discussion)

    By R. C. Allen

    About four years ago the writer proposed a revision of the correlation of the Huronian formations in Michigan, and noted the bearing of the question on the correlations of the Huronian rocks in Wiscon

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Underground Mining

    WITHOUT in any way detracting from the credit due those engineer-miners of copper who operate with power shovels, it may be said that compared with block-caving underground their work is simplicity it

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Bleaching Clay

    By A. D. Rich

    THE term "bleaching clay" or "bleaching earth," as used in the oil industries, refers to clays that in their natural state, or after chemical or physical activation, have the capacity for adsorbing co

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Valuation Of Mineral Property (c6d49a6b-431c-4a28-8310-b60fd1462462)

    By L. C. Raymond

    Valuations in the mineral industry differ from those of other enterprises because mines and oil wells have a definitive life so cannot be considered a perpetuity. This requires that in any mineral-pro

    Jan 1, 1959

  • AIME
    Papers - Testing and Calculation - Calculations in Ore Dressing (With Discussion)

    By W. Luyken, E. Bierbrauer

    A number of articles have been published, notably those by R. S. Handy, R. T. Hancock and A. P. Watt in Engineering and Mining Journal, dealing with the calculations involved in ore dressing. These pu

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Examples of the Application of Sulfur Isotopes to Economic Geology

    By Eric S. Cheney

    Sulfur isotopes are best used in conjunction with other geological studies to determine the origin of known deposits; concept-oriented exploration programs can then be developed to find similar deposi

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Papers - Mining Geology - Origin of Iron Ores of Iron Mountain and Pilot Knob, Missouri (With Discussion)

    By Joseph T. Singewald

    AMONG the genetically interesting iron ores of the United States are those of the St. Francis Mountains near Ironton and Iron Mountain, Missouri. They are specular hematite in porphyry. The Iron Mount

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Barodynamics (Ground Support) - Concrete and Wood Blocks for Ground Support in Cyprus Mines (Mining Tech., July 1948, TP 2413)

    By J. L. Bruce, G. W. Nicolson

    ThE country rock of the Mavrovouni mine of the Cyprus Mines Corp. is hydro-thern~ally altered, disintegrated pillow lava, with very little tensile strength ("short" ground). In places, especially when

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Government Policies For Mineral Development And Trade

    By Richard L. Gordon

    Minerals long have been important commodities in international trade. As an inevitable result, the governments of the world have employed a wide variety of programs that affect the flow of trade. Roug

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    A Wartime Cause Célèbre

    By Robert Glass Cleland

    FROM the time of its organization down to 1917, a period of more than eighty years, Phelps, Dodge & Co. was seldom involved in what could be called a major labor difficulty. Behind this remarkable rec

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    PART V - Changes of Dislocation Damping Observed During Yielding of Magnesium, Molybdenum, and LiF

    By R. B. Gordon, D. A. Koss

    Ultrasonic-atlenuation changes due to the formation of free dislocations have been observed during tensile tests of magnesium and LiF single crystals and samples of polycrystalline Results on the L

    Jan 1, 1967