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  • AIME
    Iron and Steel

    By Edgar C. Bain

    A NUMBER probably a sizable group of person with a dominant interest in metals maintain contact with the developments in ferrous metallurgy by reading week by week, as time permits, some four or five

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Surface Graphitization of a Hypereutectoid Iron-Carbon Alloy (TN)

    By G. R. Speich

    RECENT studies by Smith and Olney,1,2 Olney,3 Greifer and Salli,4 Rys etal., and Olney and smith 6 have established that graphite is the first decomposition product to format the surface of hypereut

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Management and the Engineer

    By HAROLD VINTON COES

    MANAGEMENT has been tersely defined as getting things done through the efforts of other people; but before we proceed further, let us distinguish between administration, management, and organization.

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Engineers Need More Than Technical Capacity

    By J. L. Perry

    FOR many years, you and your fellow members of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers have devotedly and ably applied yourselves to the art of making iron and steel. having forem

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Papers - Miscellaneous - Equilibrium Relations in Aluminum-manganese Alloys of High Purity, II

    By William L. Fink, E. H. Dix, L. A. Willey

    The results of a preliminary investigation of the aluminum-iron-manganese system showed that small amounts of iron (0.10 per cent) substantially reduce the solid solubility of manganese in aluminum. T

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Creep Properties of Commercially Pure Titanium

    By M. J. Sinnott, W. R. Kiessel

    The creep characteristics of commercially pure titanium sheet in the annealed state, cold-worked state, and cold-worked and recovered state in the temperature range from 75' to 750°F have been de

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    Mining Geology - Fields of the Economic Geologists Widen and Their Technique Improves

    By Donald McLaughlin

    INCREASING variety of interests among mining geologists is becoming more and more marked, as the frontier of their science and of its applications continues to expand. Each of the traditional lines of

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Ground Movement and Subsidence - Specific Data Lacking Because of Threatened Lawsuits

    By George S. Rice

    DEFINITE data on the amplitude and effect of ground movement in specific mineral formations, caused by various methods used in the mining of ores, coal, and nonmetals, or in the extraction through wel

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Lubrication of Mining Equipment - Part 3 - Compressors, Pumps, Fans, Screens, Wire Rope, Shovels and Draglines, Crushers, Air Tools, and Tractors

    By Charles W. Frey

    COMPRESSED air is one of the most useful tools that the mine operator has at his disposal. It is clean, nontoxic, easily handled, and can be distributed anywhere that a man can drag a length of rubber

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Potash in World Trade

    By C. C. CONCANNON

    POTASH is an essential. It is necessary as an ingredient in fertilizers or as a plant food, and certainly one of the great problems, and one of increasing gravity, is the maintenance of agricultural f

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Tensile Strain at Low Temperatures on Deformation Twinning in Ingot Iron

    By N. L. Carwile, G. W. Geil

    A metallographic study was made of deformation twinning (Neumann lamellae) in ingot iron slowly deformed in tension at —196O and —150°C. The results showed that twinning is initiated mainly during the

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    Low-Cost Oxygen for Metallurgical Operations

    By Nagel, Theodore

    USE of oxygen in metallurgical operations was investigated by a committee of unusually able engineers more than ten years ago. A record of their work appeared under the title "The Use of Oxygen or Oxy

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Finite Plastic Deformation Due to Crystallographic Slip

    By R. N. Thurston, E. A. Nesbitt, G. Y. Chin

    A general relalionship between the amount of glide shear (due to slip) and the macroscopic shape change has been developed. Since the deformation can be large, finite strain analysis is employed. In t

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Athletic Supplies For The 602D Engineers

    We are advised by Second-Lieutenant Maxwell E. Erdofy, a member of the Institute, and athletic officer of the 602d Engineers, stationed at Camp Devens, Mass., that his regiment, representing all branc

    Jan 5, 1918

  • AIME
    North Dakota State Geological Survey

    The University of North Dakota, State Geological Survey, Grand Forks, N. D A G. Leonard, State Geologist. Two publications of the State Geological Survey are of interest Fourth Biennial Report, Th

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    The Mining And Reduction Of Quicksilver Ore At The Oceanic Mine, Cambria, Cal.

    Discussion of the paper of C. A. HEBERLEIN, presented at the New York meeting. February, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 98, February, 1915, pp. 497 to 504. H. D. PALLISTER, State College, Pa. (com

    Jan 5, 1915

  • AIME
    The Effect of Phosphorus in Steel

    By R. T. ROLFE

    IN this critical age, people are not content .with the judgments passed on men and things long ago, but must needs revise them. It is an excellent spirit, so long as we do not start out with the idea

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Conservation Of Natural Resources.

    By James Douglas

    Discussion of the paper of James Douglas, presented at the New Haven meeting, February, 1909, and published in Bulletin No. 29, May, 1909, pp. 439 to 451. JAMES DOUGLAS, New York, N. Y. (communic

    Apr 1, 1910

  • AIME
    The California Oil Outlook ? How Forecasts Are Made - Possible Sources of Oil Products

    By R. L. Minckler

    PETROLEUM industry forecasts are constantly made and revised but are not in the nature of predictions. Particularly in the field of demand, many of the factors are far beyond control by the producing

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    The Passing of the Prospector

    By MERLE HOWARD GUISE

    WHEN I was a boy I walked into Fairbanks in 1905. I was but a soft chechako, and arrived with blisters covering my feet, as a result of "mushing" the 400-mile trail on foot. Because of them, the displ

    Jan 1, 1929