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  • AIME
    Annual Report of the Woman's Auxiliary

    ANNUAL meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary of the American Institute of Mining and Metal-lurgical Engineers convened on Tuesday morn-ing, Feb. 20, the president, Mrs. H. W. Hardinge, presiding. Pres

    Jan 4, 1923

  • SME
    Annual Review - Exploration 1986

    By E. D. Attanasi, J. H. DeYoung

    Although fraught with problems of completeness and comparability, statistical measures of mineral exploration in the United States point downward for 1985 and 1986. Exploration expenditures in the US

    Jan 5, 1987

  • AIME
    Annual Review - Coal

    By M. D. Cooper

    Production of both anthracite and bituminous coal in 1954 was about 16 pct below 1953. Estimates on Dec. 1, 1954, indicated 27 million tons of anthracite and 385 million tons of bituminous. Decline in

    Jan 3, 1955

  • AIME
    Annual Review - Coal

    By John F. Barkley, J. W. Woomer, H. F. Yancey, H. B. Charmbury

    The coal picture in 1955 was much brighter than in 1954, when the tonnage produced dropped to the 1939 level. Bituminous coal and lignite production are expected to approach 465 million tons, against

    Feb 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Annual Review - Industrial Minerals in 1954

    By Robert C. Stephenson

    In 1954, a year when general industrial production declined, it is significant that industrial mineral products continued in high demand. Phenomenal growth of the cement industry, increase in filler-f

    Jan 3, 1955

  • AIME
    Annual Review - Underground Mining - The Trends in 1956 - Arizona-New Mexico

    By Hugh Steele, Brower Dellinger

    U. S. mining trends for 1956 continued steadily U+ S. uphill, technique and equipment advanced with the pull, and exploration and development of once mined districts attracted more attention than new

    Jan 2, 1957

  • SME
    Annual Review 1987 - Exploration - Introduction

    By E. D. Attanasi, M. W. Bultman

    Most statistical measures of mineral exploration continued downward in 1986. Prospects in 1987, however, appear to have brightened for exploration as the overall economic health of the mineral industr

    Jan 5, 1988

  • SME
    Annual Review 1988

    By E. D. Attanasi, M. W. Bultman, J. H. DeYoung

    The 1987 recovery in the US mining industry permitted modest increases in exploration expenditures that year (Fig. 1). Favorable market conditions apparently allowed the gains to be sus¬tained in 1988

    Jan 1, 1989

  • SME
    Annual Review 1989 – Exploration – Mining – Minerals Processing - Coal

    By E. D. Attanasi

    The US mining industry finished the traumatic 1980s with a strong economic performance. Worldwide economic growth and capital spending led to tight metal markets. So, 1989 metals prices were generally

    Jan 1, 1990

  • SME
    Annual Review 1990 – Exploration 1990

    By E. D. Attanasi

    Exploration for non-fuel minerals has declined since 1988 as recessionary pressures have slowed growth in the industrialized economies. By most accounts, however, 1990 expenditures were still signific

    Jan 1, 1991

  • SME
    Annual Review 1991- Exploration 1991

    In 1991, most industrialized countries, except for Germany, were in a recession or a period of reduced growth. The US economy, already in recession, suffered from mounting banking system losses and th

    Jan 1, 1992

  • SME
    Annual Review 1992 – Exploration 1992

    Worldwide minerals exploration slipped in 1992 from 1991 levels. Although industrial production figures showed the US economy emerging from recession in early 1992, it was not until February 1993 that

    Jan 1, 1993

  • SME
    Annual Review 1993 – Exploration 1993

    During 1993, contraction of indus¬trial economies in Germany (-2%), France (-1 %), Japan (-0.1 %), Eastern Europe (-2%) and the former Soviet Union (-13%) dimmed prospects of a robust economic recover

    Jan 1, 1994

  • SME
    Annual Review 1994

    The US economy grew at a rate of 4% in 1994 and the gross domestic product rose to $6.74 trillion. With 261 million people - 605,000 in mining, including petroleum -the United States has l 10 million

    Jan 1, 1995

  • SME
    Annual Review 1995 – The United States 1995

    By D. Washington

    The US economy and the demand for nonfuel minerals grew at lower rates in 1995 than in 1994. Demand for major metals, such as aluminum, copper and steel, was mixed but relatively stable. The buildin

    Jan 1, 1996

  • SME
    Annual Review 2001 – The United States 2001

    By R. F. Balazik

    By March 2001, shrinking global markets, reduced consumer spending and declines in domestic manufacturing and industrial output ended the longest economic expansion in US history and pushed the nation

    Jan 1, 2002

  • SME
    Annual Review 2002 – The United States 2002

    By P. A. Plunkert, D. E. Morse, L. McCartan, S. F. Sibley

    Following the recession of 2001, restrained consumer spending, declines in domestic manufacturing and industrial output, and increased unemployment led to a lack-luster year in the domestic economy.

    Jan 1, 2003

  • SME
    Annual Review 2003 - Mining Review

    By P. A. Plunkert, D. E. Morse, L. McCartan, S. F. Sibley

    The average annual growth rate of real gross domes-tic product (GDP) from the third quarter of 2001through the second quarter of 2003 in the United States was about 2.6 percent. GDP growth rates in th

    Jan 1, 2004

  • SME
    Annual Review 2004 – Mining Review

    By P. A. Plunkert, D. E. Morse, L. McCartan, J. F. Papp

    The mineral sector is a fundamental part of the U.S. economy. It contributes to the real gross domestic product (GDP) at several levels — basic (mining), intermediate processing, manufacturing of fin

    Jan 1, 2005

  • SME
    Annual Review 2005

    By F. Freme

    Coal production in the United States reached a record level in 2005, ending the year at 1.03 Gt (1,133.3 million st) according to preliminary data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (Tabl

    Jan 1, 2006