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  • AIME
    Some Coeur d'Alene Geology

    By J. E. Berg

    THE geology of the Coeur d'Alene mining district is so familiar to every one interested in mining that I will only note as an introduction that the main producers are mines whose orebodies lie in

    Jan 7, 1927

  • AIME
    Student Associates (99d5b086-8ec8-4a07-831c-0e79f43056b5)

    Aalde, Kaare, (S'40) Box 827, Socorro, N. M. Aase, Glenn D., (S'40) Engr. Experiment Sta., Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah. Abadesco, Enrique A., (S'39) Student. College of Engrg

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Surface Diffusion of Gold and Copper on Copper

    By Jei Y. Choi, P. G. Shewmon

    The surfrrce-diffusion coefficients (DJ for Aulg8 on (100) and (111) surfaces of copper have been determined between 1050" and 780°C using a new avuzlysis imd experimental procedure. The results are:

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    A New Catalyst for Sulfuric-Acid Manufacture

    By AIME AIME

    S ULFURIC acid made in the United States during the last four years has averaged approximately 7,000,000 tons of 50" B6 acid a year. This is double the production of the year 1913. About 66 per cent o

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Improved Process for Making Prereduced Iron Ore Pellets, An

    By R. B. Schluter, M. M. Fine

    Processes for manufacturing prereduced pellets have heretofore required temperatures of 2100°F or higher. Sulfides will accelerate the liquid-phase sintering of metallic iron, yet do not deter the red

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Enlightened Self-Interest in the Copper Industry: Its Results and Promise

    By Notman, Arthur

    THIS is a day of surpluses, some good and some not so good. One can hardly pick up a newspaper, magazine, review or economic treatise without confronting the fact that we have or are threatened with m

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    A Concise Method Of Showing Ore-Reserves.

    By N. H. Emmons

    THE work of a consulting engineer or manager, when controlling mining-operations, requires that he have all the information concerning the mine in as concise a form as possible, and as the ore-reserve

    Jun 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Sweden's Grangesberg Switching Over To Continuous Block Caving

    By Robert Sisselman

    Central Sweden's Grängesberg underground iron ore mine, which accounts for more than three million tons of pellet product annually, is experiencing a major changeover to continuous block-caving.

    Jan 1, 1974

  • AIME
    The Action of Various Commercial Carbonizing-Materials.

    By ROBERT R. ABUOTT

    (Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) THE practice of carbonizing steel for the purpose of case-hardening has assumed great commercial importance within the past, 10 years. Formerly, case-hardened ste

    Dec 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Joint Sessions for Mining Geology Group Prove Most Success

    By AIME AIME

    ALL sessions of the Mining Geology Committee at the Annual Meeting this year were held jointly with other groups, a plan that seemed to work out to the satisfaction of every one. Certain of these sess

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Production Jet-Piercing of Blastholes in Magnetic Taconite

    By J. J. Calaman, D. H. Fleming

    DURING 1950 the jet-piercing process was used commercially in the piercing of primary blast-holes in magnetic taconite at the preliminary taconite plant of .the Erie Mining Co., Aurora, Minn. The E

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Salt Lake Paper - Copper Ores of the New London Mine

    By B. S. Butler, H. D. McCaskey

    The New London copper mine, about 8 1/2 miles east of Frederick, Md., was visited by the writers for a few hours in the spring of 1909 and the following brief notes on ore specimens collected are pres

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper -Further Observations on the Relations Between the Chemical Constitution and Physical Character of Steel (See Discussion, "Physics of Steel," p. 608)

    By William R. Webster

    I have continued the investigation of the Pottstown Iron Com pany's basic Bessemer keel plates on the line referred to in my paper of last October (Trans., xxi., 766)) and have added a study of t

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Appendix - The Origin of Metalliferous Deposits

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    THERE are about sixty bodies which chemists call elements ; the simplest forms of matter which they have been able to extract from the rocky crust of our earth, its waters, and its atmosphere. These s

  • AIME
    Titanium And Zirconium

    By Robert I. Jaffee, Walter L. Finlay

    IN the broad survey of the nonferrous' metallic elements contained in this book, the reader may well be impressed by the wide range of property combinations offered by the many metals and alloys

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Coal - Economics of Pegmatites

    By Paul A. Taylor

    MUCH information concerning pegmatites which was thought to be true a few years ago has been proved false, and what is now actually known about some pegmatites is not true of many others. The erratic

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    Discussions - Of Mr. Parker's Paper on The Conservation of Coal in the United States (sec p. 596)

    W. L. Saunders, New York, N. Y.:—Mr. Parker's paper, though entitled Conservation of Coal, might also be called the Conservation of Life in the Coal-Mines of the United States. No subject is of g

    Jan 1, 1910

  • AIME
    The Depression Gold Rush

    By J. B. Knaebel, M. W. Von Bernewitz

    OUTSTANDING FACTORS that have largely induced the current great interest in the reopening of old mines and the search for new deposits are the increased relative value of gold, the certainty of a mark

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Medal for Chuquicamata Metallurgy

    By E. A. Cappelen Smith

    FOR distinguished service in the art of hydrometallurgy, the Mining and Metallurgical Society of America presented its gold medal to E. A. Cappelen Smith, at a dinner held in the Hotel Commodore, New

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Lime

    By Kenneth A. Gutschick, Robert S. Boynton

    Lime has become a general and loosely used term to denote almost any kind of calcareous material or finely divided form of limestone or dolomite, as well as burned forms of lime. However, according to

    Jan 1, 1975