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  • AIME
    Postwar Products Planning and Raw Materials Sources

    By Clyde E. Williams

    IN planning a postwar program for manufactured products, it is essential that the bases for the plans be wisely chosen. First we must make certain assumptions as to the war's ending. Let us assum

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    The Use of Mud-Laden Water in Drilling Wells

    Discussion -of the paper of I. N. KNAPP, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 96, December, 1914, pp. 2783 to 2793. A. C. LANE, Tufts College, Mass.-Is there

    Jan 5, 1915

  • AIME
    Temperature Measurements Of Incandescent Gas Mantles

    By Herbert Ives

    THE incandescent gas mantle is of considerable interest from the standpoint of temperature measurement because it presents a series of apparent contradictions to the established laws of radiation on w

    Jan 9, 1919

  • AIME
    Effect of Rising Wages on the Economy of the United States

    By Marcus Nadler

    WAGES in the United States, in spite of the wage freeze, have increased materially. Overtime payments have become standard practice in almost all industries. Now efforts are being made to place wages

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    The Mexican Gambusino in El Tigre

    By W. A., Wasley

    THE EL TIGRE MINE is a highgrade silver and gold producer located in the northern part of Sonora, Mexico. It has been worked continuously since 1903, producing 50,000.000 oz. of silver and returning h

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Federal Control of Petroleum Resources

    By John M. Lovejoy

    FEDERAL regulation of the petroleum resources of the nation has long been an interesting topic for discussion. A plan to accomplish Federal control has now taken definite form. At the request of the P

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Safeguarding Coal-Mining Operations Against Danger From Oil And Gas Wells

    By A. W. Hesse

    TWELVE years ago, a meeting of coal-mine operators, mining engineers, oil and gas operators, Bureau of Mines engineers, geologists and state mine inspectors took place in Pittsburgh, Pa. for the purpo

    Jan 2, 1925

  • AIME
    No Real Scarcity of Lead Likely

    By Francis H. Brownell

    During the 1920's lead consumption in the United States reached the highest average total ever known. For the ten-year period 1921-'30, it was slightly over 600,000 tons per year, or say 50,

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Study of the Radiation Stability of Austenitic Type 347 Stainless Steel

    By J. R. Low, M. B. Reynolds, L. O. Sullivan

    The effect of neutron bombardment upon the stability of type 347 austenitic stainless steel has been investigated by a magnetic technique. The relation of the ferrite content of a stainless steel to i

    Jan 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Part IV – April 1969 - Papers - Thermal Diffusion above the Eutectoid Temperature in Titanium-Hydrogen Type Systems

    By M. Duclos, A. Sawatzky

    A simple model has been developed which describes the steady-state solute distribution in Ti-H type systems above the eutectoid temperature in the presence of a temperature gradient. The solute distr

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Mine Ventilation - The Air-current Regulator (with Discussion)

    By W. S. Weeks

    In coursing the ventilating air through a mine it is often necessary to restrict a comparatively open split in order that it may carry exactly the desired quantity of air. Such a restriction is known

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Anaconda's Berkeley Pit A Four-Part Report On Open Pit Mining Operations - Berkeley Pit History And Geology

    By Charles C. Goddard

    Since discovery of silver-gold lode deposits in 1864, the Butte district has produced more than $2.25 billion worth of copper, zinc, manganese, silver, and gold, an unprecedented value in the mining w

    Jan 3, 1959

  • AIME
    Overflow Crowd at Coal Division Sessions Takes Part in Lively Discussions

    By D. R. Mitchell

    MEETING for the thirteenth time in New York as part of the five-ring circus known as the Annual Meeting A.I.M.E., the Coal Division experienced a wartime boom in attendance. Technical sessions were cr

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Thickening - Art Or Science?

    By E. J. Roberts

    Prior to 1916, thickening was an art, and any accurate decision as to what size of machine to install to handle a given tonnage of a specific ore must have been one of those intuitive conclusions, bas

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Factors Affecting Investment in South American Mining

    By NEWTON B. KNOX

    THE war has forced the principal industrial nations of the' world into the strait jacket of a closely controlled economy; taxes have been heaped upon all enterprises in order to maintain the arme

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, October 1876 Paper - An Outline of Anthracite Coal Mining in Schuylkill County, Pa

    By J. Price Wetherill

    The coal-seams that are worked vary from 3 1/2 to 100 feet in thickness, and occur at all angles of inclination, but are never flat for any great extent. They contain coal, slate, and an unsolidified

  • AIME
    Canada Cement Co. Building Highly Automated Plant In Nova Scotia

    By A. O. Drysdale

    In Canada, the market for cement is not a national one but rather a collection of local or regional markets. Excess capacity on a national basis does not necessarily preclude a shortage on a regional

    Jan 4, 1965

  • AIME
    Nonelectric Explosives Detonation at the Henderson Mine (c8dd94fb-81e5-449f-a62e-7e531557f1fd)

    By E. B. Jensen, C. E. Doane, J. F. Pirozzoli

    Results of an extensive one-year test of a nonelectric explosives detonating system led to the mine-wide adoption of this system in early 1978. Since that time, further experience with nonelectric ini

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    Ferroalloys in 1949

    By R. G. Knickerbocker

    A most important research and development item on ferroalloys in the calendar year of 1949 was the increase of interest in the recovery of secondary manganese. Owing to the importance of manganese to

    Jan 6, 1950

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Self-Diffusion in Alpha Iron

    By R. J. Borg, C. E. Birchenall

    The self-diffusion coefficients for a iron have been deternzined between 980° and 1167° K using Fe55 as the tracer. With decreasing temperature the diffusivity was found to decrease more rapidly than

    Jan 1, 1961