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  • AIME
    Alaskan Coal Fields

    By George Evans

    DURING the past ten or twelve years, the average reader of newspaper and magazine articles has been led to believe that enormous deposits of high-grade coal exist in the northland and that these can b

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Carbon Ratios of Coals in West Virginia Oil Fields

    By David Reger

    THE value of carbon ratios in determining the boundaries of possible oil deposits appears to have passed the hypothetical stage. The theory that the ratio of fixed carbon in pure coals is an, invariab

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Skip Hoisting For Coal Mines

    By Andrews Allen

    THE large increase in the wages of mine workers makes it imperative that all factors tending to limit production per miner be eliminated, if possible. The trolley and storage-battery locomotive, minin

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Dust-Ventilation Studies In Metal Mines

    By D. Harrington

    ONE of the main functions of the United States Bureau of Mines is to obtain and disseminate information that will promote safety in and around mines, and the health and safety of employees engaged in

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Manufacture of Ferromanganese in the Electric Furnace

    By Robert Keeney

    THE electric smelting of manganese ore and the production of ferro- manganese did not exist as an industry, in the United States or elsewhere, previous to the outbreak of war in 1914. Ferromanganese h

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Secondary Intrusive Origin Of Gulf Coastal Plain Salt Domes

    By W. G. Matteson

    THE origin of the salt domes of the Gulf coastal plain has been investigated by many of the most able geologists, but the problem cannot be said to have been satisfactorily solved. Since 1860, numerou

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Chemical Equilibrium Between Iron, Carbon, And Oxygen

    By Matsubara, A.

    THE problem of the equilibrium between iron, carbon, and oxygen was first carefully investigated by E. Baur and A. Glaessner,1 who determined the equilibrium conditions of the two reactions Fe304 + C

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    The Health Of The Underground Worker

    By A. J. Lanea

    INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE bids fair to become one of the most important and highly developed branches of medical science. Mining companies, even in remote districts, have developed large and efficient medic

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Molybdenum Steels

    By John Mathews

    IT is twenty years since the writer made his first molybdenum steels and others were making them commercially five years earlier but the prevailing opinion seems to be that molybdenum steels are new;

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    The Electric Furnace In The Iron Foundry

    By Richard Moldenke

    ONE of the gravest problems of the iron foundry today is the accumulation of sulfur in commercial scrap and its effect on the castings made therewith. The ordinary jobbing castings today show a sulfur

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Discussion Of Papers Presented At The New York Meeting, 1921

    Tooele Flue-type Cottrell Treater Discussion of the-paper of A. B. YOUNG, to be presented at the New York meeting, February, 1921, and printed to accompany MINING AND METALLURGY No. 162, June, 1920.

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Coal-Pillar Drawing Methods In Europe

    By George Rice

    SOME form of longwall mining is generally used in Continental Europe; also in Great Britain where the coal is weak and friable, or the coal bed provides material for pack walls and filling, or where t

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Measurement Of Blast-Furnace Gas

    By D. L. Ward

    This paper is the result of a study, in 1919, to determine how much surplus power could be produced through the proper utilization of the entire gas flow from the two furnace stacks at the Federal Fur

    Jan 2, 1921

  • AIME
    Effect Of Temperature, Deformation, Grain Size And Rate Of Loading On Mechanical Properties Of Metals

    By W. P. Sykes

    THIS investigation was undertaken primarily to establish the relations existing between temperature and mechanical properties in molybdenum, nickel, and an aluminum-copper alloy. Molybdenum (m.p. 2500

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
  • AIME
    New York Paper - Treatment Tests on Ores of Consolidated Coppermines Co. (with Discussion)

    By Robert Linton

    In 1898, Joseph L. Giroux and J. A. Snedaker organized the Pilot Knob Copper Co. and began developing the Pilot Knob mine at Kim-berly, Nev., for high-grade copper ores, carrying good gold and silver

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Steel Chimneys and Their Linings at Copper Smelting Plants (with Discussion)

    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
    Philadelphia Paper - Deterioration of Nickel Spark-plug Terminals in Service (with Discussion)

    By A. I. Krynitzky, Henry S. Rawdon

    The most commonly used material for terminals in spark plugs is commercial nickel wire, because of its relatively high temperature of melting, excellent heat conductivity, and slow rate at which the m

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Important Factors In Talc Milling Effeciency

    By Raymond Ladoo

    THE milling of talc, as is the case of many non-metallic minerals, until recently, has not received adequate technical consideration, for the talc industry has become of importance only within the las

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Milling Process in Southwest Wisconsin Zinc District

    By D. L., Hayes

    THE concentration of zinc ore in Wisconsin is a comparatively simple process, although it presents problems that must be overcome in an efficient manner in such a way that installation and operating c

    Jan 1, 1921