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Karl L. Fetters is AIME President for 1964Karl L. Fetters moves to the front of the AIME organization this month as the 1964 President of the Institute. He will take the chair vacated by outgoing President Roger V. Pierce at the Annual Meetin
Jan 2, 1964
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Geology is Still the Key to Mineral SuppliesBy Roger H. McConnel
Throughout the world in 1950 there has been extensive exploration for metals, with emphasis on iron, copper, gold, lead, and zinc. Among the features most apparent in reviewing exploration and dev
Jan 2, 1951
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New York Paper - Anthracite Mining CostsBy R. V. Norris, E. W. Parker
Edward W. Parker,* Philadelphia, Pa.—At the New York meeting of the Institute a year ago, Mr. R. V. Norris presented a paper on anthracite mining costs, in which he gave the results of an intensive st
Jan 1, 1920
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Is One Principal Aim Better Than Manifold InterestsBy Bradley Stoughton
PROMINENCE has been given lately in engineering circles to the question whether an organisation with manifold interests can be as effective as one with a single aim, especially if that single aim be t
Jan 1, 1920
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Council of Section Delegates AIMEOFFICERS AND COMMITTEES OF LOCAL SECTIONS AIME Committee on Local Section Affairs Roger Pierce, Chairman Carleton C Long Thomas C Frick AIME Committee on Student Chapter Affairs John P Nielson,
Jan 1, 1959
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Professional Ethics.By John Hays Hammond
This is an era of " expansion; and, conformably with the change in commercial conditions, the function of the mining engineer, as well as that of his confreres in many other professions, has also expa
Nov 1, 1908
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Palmerton Zinc Refractories (b7bc1f9d-13d1-45d2-9d7d-59dc1b914b9e)H. RIES, Ithaca, N. Y.-The part of Mr. Fiske's paper that interests me especially is that portion dealing with the raw materials, and the tests that were applied to the raw materials in order to
Jan 1, 1918
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Nickel (5bef2318-de4f-4252-8504-33b883169380)By Paul D. Merica, O. B. J. Fraser
PROBABLY the first metallic objects used by man were nickel alloys. In search for flints suitable for the fashioning of their rude tools, our paleolithic ancestors, some 25,000 years ago, quite likely
Jan 1, 1953
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Effect of Mill Speeds on Grinding CostsBy Harlowe Hardinge, R. C. Ferguson
Laboratory and plant data covering 12 different operations show that lower than "standard" ball mill speeds increase grinding efficiency. In the case of high pulp-level mills, the gain is so great tha
Jan 1, 1950
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in West Virginia during 1938By David B. Reger
Exploration for new pools of gas in the Oriskany sand and continued exploitation of areas already known to be productive in that sand were the main features of petroleum activity in West Virginia duri
Jan 1, 1939
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in West Virginia during 1938By David B. Reger
Exploration for new pools of gas in the Oriskany sand and continued exploitation of areas already known to be productive in that sand were the main features of petroleum activity in West Virginia duri
Jan 1, 1939
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Composition And Microstructure Of Ancient Iron CastingsBy Maurice L. Pinel, Thomas T. Read, Thomas A. Wright
THE erroneous, but until recently widely prevalent, belief that iron castings were first made in Europe in the fourteenth century has been adequately refuted in a number of earlier papers;1,11,12 but
Jan 1, 1938
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Underground Mining - Computer-Aided Solution of Complex Ventillation NetworksBy L. W. Saperstein, Y. J. Wang
The development of computer programs to solve complex ventilation networks has reached a point of refinement where these programs become a necessary tool of the ventilating engineer. Such a program is
Jan 1, 1971
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Some General Problems of the Mineral IndustryBy Thomas T. Read
THE official title of our topic for today is "Resources of Metals and Other Strategic Minerals," but in accepting the invitation to open this discussion I claimed the privilege of being allowed to tal
Jan 1, 1929
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Coal Dock Operations of the North Western-Hanna Fuel Company at the Head of the LakesBy J. T. Crawford
ALTHOUGH nearly 10 pct of the total tonnage of coal produced annually within the United States is handled by bulk freighters on the Great Lakes, very little of the detail connected with it has been pu
Jan 1, 1948
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Recent Advances in Mine Safety Practices and EquipmentBy J. T. Ryan
SAFETY practice or the elimination of accidents in our coal mines is specifically a problem of management. It cannot be delegated to any governmental agency except that the various coal-producing stat
Jan 1, 1937
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Institute of Metals Division - Fabrication of Neptunium-237 Wire by Extrusion (TN)By R. E. Tate, L. J. Herman
We have had occasion to produce wire of Np-237 in small diameters for use in some chemical experiments. Since the mechanical metallurgy of neptunium has not been investigated extensively, it seems des
Jan 1, 1965
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Data Processing by Machine – Asset at the Mine SiteBy Richard F. Link, George S. Koch
About 50,000 assays of mine samples were required in a preliminary investigation of the distribution of gold, silver, lead, copper, and zinc in two large Mexican mines, the Frisco mine at San Francisc
Jan 9, 1960
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Papers - Mining - Bumps in No. 2 Mine, Springhill, Nova Scotia (With Discussion)By Walter Herd
FoR the past eight years No. 2 mine of the Cumberland Railway & Coal CO., Springhill, Nova Scotia—a subsidiary of the Dominion Coal Co., Ltd.—has had an unenviable reputation for bumps. As the working
Jan 1, 1930
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