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  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Bellamy Field Tests: Oil From Tar by Counterflow Underground Burning

    By J. C. Trantham, J. W. Marx

    From 1955 to 1958 the Phillips Petroleum Co. conducted a series of small scale counterflow combustion field tests in a tar sand about 60-ft deep and 6 to 12-ft thick near Bellamy, Mo. A total of seven

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Basal Plane Development in Electrodeposited Hexagonal-Close-Packed Metals: Zinc, Titanium, and Zirconium

    By W. R. Opie

    The object of this paper is to show the manner in which typical electrodeposits of hexagonal-close-packed metals—zinc, titanium, and zirconium—tend to form. The conditions of electrodeposi-tion marked

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Errata Sheet - A Decade Of Digital Computing In The Mineral Industry

    The following figures (Nos. 1-4) and tables (Nos. 1 and 2) were inadvertently omitted from the chapter entitled "Optimum Open-Pit Mine Production Scheduling" by Thys B. Johnson, Section 4, pages 539-5

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Placer Law as Applied to Petroleum

    By Max W. Ball

    An intelligent discussion of the oil situation and its needs, whether from the standpoint of the prospector, the operator, the engineer, or the public administrative officer, must be founded upon a kn

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    Purification of Zinc Ores in Sintering

    By REED H. HYDE

    IN these days of low metal prices and difficult marketing conditions, any treatment that will improve the grade of a product is of interest, particularly when the operation involves little or no addit

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Has the Engineer Done Too Much for the World?

    By Frederick Laist

    I AM APPRECIATIVE of the honor you have done me in electing me to membership in your Society. I value the contacts with men of imagination and ideals which this implies. I am grateful for the recognit

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Colorado Paper - Possible Existence of Deep-seated Oil Deposits on the Gulf Coast (with Discussion)

    By A. F. Lucas

    The discovery of oil in 1901 on the Spindletop dome, Texas, inaugurated a new industry on the Gulf Coast, an industry which has gran with the discovery of successive fields, until today it engages the

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Economics of Mineral Pigments

    By W. M. Myers

    Certain minerals possess inherent color and other properties that make them suitable for the pigmentation of paints, mortar, plaster, concrete, face brick, and other materials. Their production is one

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Variety and Number of Research Projects Stimulated by the War

    By E. R. Kaiser

    COAL research during 1942 was directed in an important degree toward the solution of problems of wartime importance. A wider selection of coals for carbonization to meet the increased demand for coke,

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Rolling Strip Steel at the Inland Steel Company's Plant

    By WILFRED SYKES

    THE story of the rolling of strip steel is not limited to any one plant or individual or group of individuals. It is a story with many ramifications. First of all, it should be understood that the str

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Improving Working Conditions in a Hot Mine

    By Russell C., Fleming

    FOK, many years the officials of the Magma Copper Co. mine at Superior, Ariz., have had to contend with adverse conditions underground in the form of high rock temperatures, hot water, and high relati

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Silica Sand And Pebble

    By T. D. Murphy

    This chapter deals with those types of silica raw materials that have been segregated and refined by natural processes into nearly monomineralic deposits and hence, by virtue of their high degree of p

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    The Solubility Of Hydrogen In Molten Iron-Silicon Alloys

    By Carl F. Floe, Hung Liang, Michael B. Bever

    DATA on the solubility of hydrogen in iron-silicon alloys are of practical interest, as hydrogen causes gas unsoundness and embrittlement in iron and steel and is also a factor in the metallurgy of ca

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Discussions - Stainless Steel and Iron-silicon Alloys - The Solubility of Hydrogen in Molten Iron-silicon Alloys (Metals Tech., Feb. 1946, T. P. 1975, with discussion)

    By Bever M. B., Floe Carl F., Hung Liang

    Data on the solubility of hydrogen in iron-silicon alloys are of practical interest, as hydrogen causes gas unsoundness and embrittlement in iron and steel and is also a factor in the metallurgy of ca

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Discussions - Stainless Steel and Iron-silicon Alloys - The Solubility of Hydrogen in Molten Iron-silicon Alloys (Metals Tech., Feb. 1946, T. P. 1975, with discussion)

    By Bever M. B., Floe Carl F., Hung Liang

    Data on the solubility of hydrogen in iron-silicon alloys are of practical interest, as hydrogen causes gas unsoundness and embrittlement in iron and steel and is also a factor in the metallurgy of ca

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    The Cyanidation of Raw Pyritic Concentrates

    By Frank C. Smith

    THE following article covers the history of a metallurgical campaign, commenced in March, 1905, at the mines of the Socorro Gold Co., in the so-called desert region of Yuma county, Arizona. The result

    Jan 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Transmission Line---Great Falls to Butte

    "Power is transmitted to Butte, a distance of 130 miles, over two separate lines running parallel on the same right of way.The transmission line embodies the most approved ideas in construction. The c

    Jan 1, 1913

  • 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
    Increasing Responsibility of the Engineer in Public Life

    By Mark Eisner

    ONE'S JOB is the watershed down which the rest of one's life tends to flow write the Lynds in the first pages of their classic social study, "Middletown in Transition." Certainly engineers w

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Observations on the Occurrence of Iron and Silicon in Aluminum (with Discussion)

    By E. H. Dix

    All commercial aluminum contains small percentages of copper, iron, and silicon as unavoidable impurities. The purest metal obtainable commercially, special grade high purity ingot, contains a maximum

    Jan 1, 1923