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  • AIME
    Chelating Crosslinked Starches As Flocculants For Oxide And Hydroxide Mineral Fines

    By S. C. Termes, R. L. Wilfong

    As part of an effort to provide basic data on the fundamental scientific and engineering principles of minerals beneficiation, the Bureau of Mines is conducting research on the flocculation of mineral

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    A New Look At Lower Andean Mining - Chile, Bolivia And Peru Plan Mineral Future With Bold Legislation

    By Nicklaus Heil, L. D. Clark

    As political tensions in African and Asian mineral producing regions increase, the orientation of Latin America's economic development assumes importance not only in the U.S. hemispheric policy b

    Jan 5, 1967

  • AIME
    Coking Properties Of Pittsburgh District Coals

    By D. E. Wolfson, D. A. Reynolds, F. W. Smith

    IN 1948 the U. S. Bureau of Mines began a three- phase program to evaluate the extent and quality of U. S. coking coal: 1) a factual appraisal of known recoverable reserves in beds of mineable thickne

    Jan 3, 1957

  • AIME
    Geostatistical Analyses Of Coal Reserves

    By Donald E. Scheck, Da-Rong Chou

    The application of geostatistics to coal reserve analysis is discussed. One problem in particular, the selection of the optimum locations for exploratory drill holes, is considered in detail. A new in

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    An Economic Evaluation of Higher Voltages for Stripping Machines

    By Robert W. Bergmann

    Twenty years ago, the standard voltage for stripping machines was 4160 v and few people even thought of using a higher voltage. It was adequate for the machines of the day, which seldom exceeded 2500

    Jan 12, 1972

  • AIME
    Leading Physicist Recommends Coal and Nuclear Power

    By Eugene Guccione

    One of the world's most respected scientists, Dr. Hans A. Bethe (see box) has concluded that if anything can solve the energy crisis, it will be coal and uranium. "It is an illusion to think that

    Jan 5, 1975

  • AIME
    Predictable Blasting With In Situ Seismic Surveys

    By C. D. Broadbent

    Open pit blasting can be a low cost routine or a high cost bottleneck depending on geology, environment and the operator's ability to master site conditions. Because blasting is a repetitive oper

    Jan 4, 1974

  • AIME
    Atlantic City Paper - An Automatic Feed-Device for Gas-Producers

    By C. W. Bildt

    During many years of service in the iron and steel industry I have frequently found, as have also many other engineers, that the common devices used for feeding coal into gas-producers are not what th

    Jan 1, 1899

  • AIME
    The Significance Of Clay Mineralogy In The Amenability Of Sandstone Vanadium Ores

    By D. M. Hausen

    The amenability of a given vanadium ore to any given treatment depends largely on the mineralogic combinations of vanadium in the ore. Quantitative data on vanadium mineralogy provide not only an obje

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    Dispersing Properties Of Tanning Agents And Possibilities Of Their Use In Flotation Of Fine Minerals

    By G. Rinelli, A. M. Marabini

    A wide-ranging series of experiments has been carried out on value minerals (sphalerite, smithsonite and hematite) and gangue minerals (quartz and calcite) to assess the properties of various commerci

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Coal As A Source of Power For Production of Aluminum

    By Arthur F. Johnson

    Plant sites for the light metal industry must be located where ample low cost power is available. In the first half of the century hydroelectric development was the only source of this power-now the b

    Jan 4, 1955

  • AIME
    Environmental Conditions Of Deposition Of Coal

    By David White

    THE environmental conditions under which coals are deposited are revealed by the stratigraphy of the coal basins and coal beds and by the details of the structure and the physical constitution of the

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Progress Reported in Methods and Equipment: Shafts, Drilling, Explosives, Open-pit Haulage, Construction Materials, Mining, Tunnels, Backfilling, Ventilation, Research

    By Bjorge, Guy N.

    MINING method improve through the gradual process of evolution and in 1340 there were no marked outstanding innovations. On the other hand refinements of detail and betterment: in equipment design con

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Mineral Industry Educational Trends ? Basic Sciences and Technology Plus Liberal Courses Produce Well-Rounded Engineers

    By Donald H. McLaughlin

    MINERAL industry activities have not been seriously hampered by a lack of men with higher training. The balance between opportunities for employment and advancement and available personnel has been a

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Lubrication of Mining Equipment ? Part 2 - Mine Cars, Locomotives, Steam Engines and Turbines, Diesels, Motors and Generators

    By Charles W. Frey

    OF all the machinery used in mining work, mine cars are probably the most abused. They are hauled through water and muck, up hill and down grade, whipped around curves, bumped and jerked, and exposed

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    The Place of the Engineer in Modern Life

    By Harvey N. Davis

    MUCH has been written and said during the last twenty years about the place of the engineer in modern life, about the fundamental role that he plays both in developing and in maintaining the material

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    What the College Expects of the .Operating Companies in Receiving and Training Its, Graduates

    By W. B. Plank

    I HAVE been asked by the Chairman of the Engineering Education Committee to outline what the engineering colleges would like the mining companies to do with the young engineer just, out of college. It

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Pure Irons - Ancient and Modern

    By J. G. Thompson

    IRON, iron everywhere, but hardly a particle of pure unadulterated iron for the metallurgist to use as a base for the protean characteristics that he develops in the alloys of iron-the modern steels.

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Engineers Need More Than Technical Capacity

    By J. L. Perry

    FOR many years, you and your fellow members of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers have devotedly and ably applied yourselves to the art of making iron and steel. having forem

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    A Wartime Cause Célèbre

    By Robert Glass Cleland

    FROM the time of its organization down to 1917, a period of more than eighty years, Phelps, Dodge & Co. was seldom involved in what could be called a major labor difficulty. Behind this remarkable rec

    Jan 1, 1952