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  • AIME
    Photoelasticity-Mining Engineer's New Tool

    By AIME AIME

    INSTITUTE members attending the Annual Meeting in New York who want to see one of the mining engineers' newest aids, photoelastic stress analysis, are due for an interesting afternoon on Thursday

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    The Advent of Flotation in the Clifton-Morenci District, Arizona

    By David Cole

    AT the time flotation appeared upon the metallurgical horizon in Arizona, the writer, under the direction of Dr. Ricketts, was engaged in remodeling and enlarging the No. 6 Concentration Plant of the

    Jan 9, 1916

  • AIME
    Drilling Selection Requires Value Judgments - Principles Of Drilling

    The selection of a particular machine for production drilling is the most critical drill evaluation the pit engineer is called upon to make. It is a true engineering design problem requiring value jud

    Jan 10, 1967

  • AIME
    The Equipment of a Laboratory for Metallurgical Chemistry in a Technical School

    By C. H. White

    Discussion of a Paper by Mr. C. H. White, read at the Atlantic City Meeting, February, 1904. (Annual Meeting, February, 1005.) ARTHUR JARMAN, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (communication to the

    Mar 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Past and Future Education of Engineers

    By C. E. MacQuigg

    BY and large the education of the engineer has been conservative and the reasons for this are obvious. Quite properly it has been a tradition of engineering education that facts and not fancies must b

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    New Board Organizes

    By W. H. Bassett

    W H. BASSETT was elected first vice-president at . the executive session of the new Board on Tues- day afternoon. Karl Eilers, H. Foster Bain, Thomas T. Read, and H. A. Maloney were respectively re-el

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Economic Trend of the Petroleum Situation

    By Joseph E. Pogue

    NEW economic forces are at work in the petroleum industry.. In order to visualize these forces and clearly see their bearing on the producer, refiner and marketer, it is necessary to see in perspectiv

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Mineral Education in 1930

    By William B. Plank

    THE growing dependence of our vast industrial civilization (:n mineral products demands today, as never before, the highest technical skill in those who produce these product-;. That the duty of train

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Papers on Magnetic and Electrical Methods at Geophysics Session

    By Sherwin F. Kelly

    LITERALLY from the four corners of the earth, from Jerusalem and China, from Mysore and Uganda, as well as from geophysicists in the United States, came contributions from workers in magnetic and elec

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    The Plight of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineering Education

    By E. A. Holbrook

    MINING Metallurgy, and Petroleum Engineering department in our colleges are facing a crisis; indeed, conditions that threaten their very existence. Unless the Army, Navy, and War Manpower Commission c

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Smoke Abatement: a Problem for the Coal Industry

    By William G. Christy

    EFFORTS at smoke abatement date back to the year 1273 in England when a law was passed prohibiting the use of "sea cole." The law was not enforced, so King Edward I, 33 years later, appointed a commis

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    World's Largest Steam-Driven Mine Hoist Restored At Quincy Mine Number Two

    The world's largest steam-driven mine hoist, built by Nordberg Manufacturing Co. a half century ago, has become a major tourist attraction in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. The hoist, designed

    Jan 9, 1968

  • AIME
    Selecting the Right Man

    THE problem of picking the best students for an engineering college can no longer, be considered as simply one of determining the amount of general ability, but rather of finding special aptitudes for

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    A Plea for Mineral-Mindedness

    By Charles W. Merrill

    IF we follow the threads of the mining problems, upon which I have touched, we find them all leading to one great fundamental desideratum. The people of this State, of this Nation, and of this world m

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Geophysical Survey in Australia

    By AIME AIME

    UNTIL recently, practically all geophysical prospecting in Australia was conducted by government departments, either by the Aerial, Geological and Geophysical Survey of Northern Australia or the New S

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    New Officers of the Institute

    By Robert E. Tally

    A recorded in the account of the Annual Meeting, on another page, the report of the tellers showed that all men nominated by the committee, which included Messrs. Wilber Judson, E. DeGolyer, W. A. Wel

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Phosphate and Potash Feature Nonmetallic Session

    By AIME AIME

    LEADING off the Thursday morning session on Non-metallics was C. E. Heinrichs' paper, "Phosphate Flotation, Its Place in the Technology and Economics of the Phosphate Industry." Mr. Heinrichs als

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Primitive Tin Metallurgy in Laos

    By Roger E. Barthelemy

    PRIMITIVE mining and metallurgy has today almost disappeared. Probably the only remaining tribal tin mining and smelting is practiced by the Laotian natives in one of the less known tin areas of the w

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Eastern Magnetite - Production Reached an All-Time Peak in 1937

    By Harrison Souder

    UNDER the stimulus of steadily in- creasing 'demands of the steel industry at home, and with the supply of available ores from abroad appreciably diminished owing to vigorous rearmament campaigns

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Anaconda Method of Bunch Blasting

    By J. J. Carrigan

    DURING the experimental stage in our use of the electric cap lamp in the Anaconda mines at Butte. Mont., we were somewhat concerned as to how the spitting of fuses would be carried out if we completel

    Jan 1, 1936