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  • AIME
    Fine Grind - Engineering Needs A Face-Lift

    By A. D. Taylor

    In recent years there has been an increasing effort to attract students into engineering. Obviously, the effort is necessary because young people find the image of the engineer unattractive. Some of t

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Production Research Work Governed Largely by War Conditions

    By P. E. Fitzgerald

    SOME readjustments in the research programs of most of the oil companics and petroleum engineering schools have been made necessary by the war. The most obvious change has been the conversion from pro

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Processing California Bastnasite Ore

    By Edwin H. Olson, Morton Smutz, Charles J. Baroch

    IN 1949 an orebody containing some 10 billion lb of recoverable rare earth metals was discovered in the Mountain Pass district of San Bernardino County, California.1 The following year Molybdenum Corp

    Jan 3, 1959

  • AIME
    Forecasting Copper Production from Dump Leaching

    By Jonathan S. Jackson, Bayne B. McMillan, W. Joseph Schlitt

    Various dump leach models have been developed by Kennecott, and these are reviewed with an eye toward production forecasting. Some of the models have been bated on first principles, utilizing the chem

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Chuquicamata Sulphide Plant: Concentrator Design

    By E. F. Raffo

    THE design of the Chuquicamata concentrator offered an unusual combination of problems, all of which had, in one way or another, a definite effect upon the final arrangement of all the equipment and n

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Age-hardening of Aluminum Alloys, I-Aluminum-copper Alloy

    By William Fink

    MANY investigators have attempted to determine the true nature of the internal changes taking place during aging. Merica, Waltenberg and Scott1 were the first to propose a theory of age-hardening. The

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Good Practice in Combatting Dust Hazards Associated with Mining Operation

    By Donald Cummings

    CERTAIN dusts are dangerous when inhaled, but most hazardous of all dusts are quartz or other forms of pure crystalline silica. The inhalation of dusts containing silica in combination with other elem

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Steel Chimneys And Their Linings In Copper Smelting Plants

    By A. G. McGregor

    IN THE Southwest a number of large steel chimneys discharge the gases from the copper smelting furnaces. Some of these chimneys show no deterioration after twenty years, others show serious deteriorat

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Coal - Municipal-water Needs vs. Strip Coal Mining

    By Gregory M. Dexter

    Recent litigation in Pennsylvania between three coal-mining companies and a private water company resulted in the payment by the coal companies of the equivalent of about $500,000 to buy a new water s

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    The Attainment Of Uniformity In Bessemer Steel

    By Thomas M. Drown

    THE means relied on to attain uniformity in Bessemer steel may be enumerated as follows I. The appearance of the flame. II. The appearance of the slag. III. The spectrum of the flame. IV. Examin

    Jan 1, 1873

  • AIME
    Salt Lake City Paper - Flotation Reagents

    By Arthur F. Taggart

    In 1900, Elmore found that if an acidulated pulp was stirred up with an oil which was relatively insoluble in and lighter than water, and the mixture was allowed to stratify, much of the sulfide would

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Coal In 1966 - A Year Of Continued Prosperity. . . And Continued Challenge

    By H. William Ahrenholz

    The coal industry had another prosperous year in 1966. Since the turn of the decade, production has been climbing at an average rate of 6% per annum. Although the fast pace slackened somewhat, 1966 pr

    Jan 2, 1967

  • AIME
    Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Gases in a Sample of Overpoled Fire-refined Copper (With Discussion)

    By O. W. Ellis

    The writer has dealt with the effect of various methods of melting copper upon the gas content of the metal.' The copper referred to in his earlier paper was melted in the foundry both in the oil

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Gases in a Sample of Overpoled Fire-refined Copper (With Discussion)

    By O. W. Ellis

    The writer has dealt with the effect of various methods of melting copper upon the gas content of the metal.' The copper referred to in his earlier paper was melted in the foundry both in the oil

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Recrystallization And Precipitation Of Aging Of Tin-Bismuth Alloys

    By J. E. Burke, C. W. Mason

    IN attempting to study precipitation from a tetragonal lattice using solid solutions of bismuth in tin, it was found that although a Widnmanstatten pattern is observed 1 only a qualitative analysis of

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Ground Water Monitoring of Underground Coal Mines (fc37dfcc-74b1-400a-b25a-fa7ac924f28c)

    By Burt A. Waite

    The new OSM regulations for ground water monitoring of underground coal mines have been the source of many concerns for the mining industry. Because the regulations were initially written at the feder

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Production and Reserves of the Pittsburgh Coal Bed

    By George Ashley

    IT has been said that the Pittsburgh bed is the most valuable single mineral deposit yet known to man. The figures in Table 1 are presented in substantiation of that claim. TABLE 1.-Pittsburgh Coal B

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Production - Introduction (c49630c6-c1e0-43a1-81f3-751fc1433ed3)

    By Basil B. Zavoico

    The symposium on production for the year 1942 contains no papers on the foreign situation except those on Argentina and Mexico. It has always been the policy of officers in charge of the symposium to

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Mining News Front

    US Tin Mission To Study Costs in Far East A move to obtain adequate supplies of tin at prices the United States is willing to pay was initiated when the interagency tin mission left for the Far East.

    Jan 12, 1951

  • AIME
    Geology - Mining Hydrology Problems in the Birmingham Red Iron Ore District

    By Thomas A. Simpson

    THE Birmingham red iron ore district in Jeffer-son County, north central Alabama, Fig. 1, is bounded on the northwest by the Warrior and Plateau coal fields and on the southeast by the Cahaba and Coos

    Jan 1, 1956