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  • AIME
    Mineral Industry Health And Safety

    By S. H. Ash

    SAFETY records have improved in all branches of the mineral industry. While annual production was rising from $2 billion in 1910 to nearly $12 billion in 1950, fatalities decreased from 3539 in 1911 t

    Jan 2, 1954

  • AIME
    Mineral Industry in Retrospect

    By Alvin Kaufman

    At the turn of the century the U.S. had a gross ALVIN KAUFMAN Mineral Economist U.S. Bureau of Mines area slightly in excess of three million square miles, a population of 76 million, a gross national

    Jan 2, 1963

  • AIME
    Mineral Industry Support Needed for European Recovery Program

    By Robert P. Koenig

    FOR the first time other than on occasion of war the people of the United States are experiencing full-scale participation in world affairs. Public concern has seldom been so involved with conditions

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Mineral Industry vs. Ecology - A Balance Between Development And Environmental Quality

    Polluted air and water, despoiled land and excessive noise are the unwelcome results of the population growth and a rising standard of living. The consumption of goods and services, including metal pr

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Mineral Inventory Versus Production Planning Case Study - Sacaton Mine, Arizona

    By Marvin P. Barnes

    The Sacaton open pit copper mine has recently been placed into production. Some problems have been encountered in maintaining grade control due to differences between early block estimates and actual

    Jan 1, 1977

  • AIME
    Mineral Needs of a World at War

    By JOHN R. SUMAN

    IT appears now that the conflict with the totalitarian states will be a long-drawn-out struggle. The course of this war up to now indicates that this may well be the first major conflict where man pow

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Mineral Obsolescence and Substitution

    By Charles W. Merrill

    Obsolescence in the mineral world is virtually nonexistent if the term is taken to mean that a mineral commodity, once established in commerce and industry, subsequently has fallen into disuse. We are

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Mineral Pigments

    By Kenneth R. Hancock

    Iron oxides are unique in that they are the only significant colored mineral found in a natural state suitable for use as a pigment after it has been pulverized to pigmentary size. The current world p

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Mineral Pigments (0b4089c4-0072-407b-a1ca-899dad8dba04)

    By Kenneth R. Hancock

    Iron oxides are unique in that they are the only significant colored mineral found in a natural state suitable for use as a pigment after being pulverized to pigmentary size. The current world product

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Mineral Pigments (1553eee0-bbe6-4265-b836-e212d709cb42)

    By Charles L. Harness

    MINERAL pigments give color, opacity, or body to paint, stucco, plaster, mortar, cement, linoleum, rubber, and similar materials. They must be finely divided, substantially insoluble, and generally in

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Mineral Pigments (90157bf0-a3ff-400f-b90a-00bb94342425)

    By Alfred Siegel

    Mineral pigments give color, opacity, or body to paint, stucco, plaster, mortar, cement, linoleum, rubber, and similar materials. They must be finely divided, substantially insoluble, and generally in

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Mineral Potential Of Japan

    By Yoshihiko Shimazaki, Hokuichiro Ohmachi

    Mineral resources of Japan are remarkably characterized by the diverse variety of ores. Seventeen kinds of metallic ores are produced in Japan from approximately 175 mines, but the country is becoming

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Mineral Potential of South Korea

    By Jerrold Marcus

    The peninsula is roughly 700 miles long and 180 miles wide. The southern portion is the American-sponsored Republic of Korea and the northern half is the Soviet-promulgated People's Democratic Re

    Apr 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Mineral Processing

    Energy conservation has been the keyword in many plant expansions. Far many years, most of the phosphate industry has been dry grinding their phosphate rock. Agrico Chemical in Florida has recently be

    Jan 2, 1975

  • AIME
    Mineral Processing Technology Forges A New Shape For The Future - Basic Science

    By Donald J. Drinkwater, M. C. Fuerstenau

    Many important contributions to the more fundamental aspects of mineral processing have been made this past year. Mular1 researched the flotation characteristics of pure zinc oxide and also samples

    Jan 2, 1966

  • AIME
    Mineral Raw Materials in the Defense Program - Stimulation of Domestic and Nearby Foreign Production, Stock-piling, Substitution and Reclamation of Waste Will Ensure Vital Supplies

    By W. L. Batt

    MODERN war means mechanization, and mechanization means raw materials, especially minerals-and lots of them. Let me recall a few events of recent history-events that constitute mile- stones down the r

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Mineral Resource Valuation in the Public Interest (a286cbd9-5581-466c-84cd-9c8a5551e51f)

    By David B. Brooks, William A. Wallace, James R. Dunn

    As the conflict between the mineral industry and preservationists steadily increases, it becomes urgent to determine as precisely as possible the costs of developing vs. not developing our domestic mi

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Mineral Resources

    By Donald H. McLaughlin

    THE primary function of the mining engineer is to find mineral deposits and fuels in the accessible rocks of the earth and to recover them for the vast needs of our complicated civilization. On him ha

    Jan 2, 1953

  • AIME
    Mineral Resources and Mineral Resourcefulness - War's Drain on Reserves Must Be Met by Development of New Techniques

    By W. E. Wrather

    DURING the war the mineral industry, and metal mining in particular, extended itself more than any other to attain the limit of its productive capacity. Likewise, probably no other industry went quite

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Mineral Resources of the Greater Antilles

    By Howard A. Meyerhoff

    AS a source of mineral wealth, the larger islands of the West Indies have never had an enviable reputation. The Spaniards took possession of them in the sixteenth century hopeful that they would yield

    Jan 1, 1941