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  • AIME
    Economics - What Is A "Have Not" Nation (The 1968 Jackling Lecture)

    By Francis Cameron

    Gloomy predictions that domestic mineral reserves are approaching exhaustion are unwarranted and may be harmful, this author contends. Specific mineral forecasting errors in the Paley Report are cited

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Nonmetallic Minerals ? New Deposits, New Methods, and New Uses, for a Variety of Industrial Minerals

    By Oliver Bowles

    A NORTH CAROLINA miner dreamed that he found high-grade mica by excavating a certain corner of his mine. The next day he sank a hole on the exact spot and found mica of excellent quality. The dream ca

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Boston and Keweenaw

    By J. Robert Van Peli

    IT was a strange but highly fruitful marriage-that union of hardy explorers, seeking the rich treasures of copper in the Lake Superior wilderness, with Boston's aristocracy of brains, capital, an

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    What Is A "Have Not" Nation? - The 1968 Jackling Award Lecture

    By Francis Cameron

    Mining is both exciting and rewarding-although at times somewhat frustrating-and we all can have real pride in our industry, in its people, and in its accomplishments. It is, however, with concern tha

    Jan 4, 1968

  • AIME
    Rock In The Box - To Know You Is To Love You

    By John F. Abel

    Personal gain seems to be the most powerful incentive to economic progress. One of my first exposures to this phenomenon was the comparison between company stopes and leaser's stopes in a vein go

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Papers - The Low-volatile Coal Field of Southern West Virginia (With Discussion)

    By Howard N. Eavenbon

    The low-volatile, or smokeless, coal field of southern West Virginia is in Fayette, Raleigh, Wyoming, Mercer, Summers and McDowell counties, in the extreme southern portion of the state, and extends i

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Cleveland Meeting

    THE sessions of the Institute were opened on Tuesday evening, October 26th, at Garrett's Hall, by Mr. Charles A. Otis, Chairman of the Local Committee of Arrangements, who welcomed the Institute

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    Cleveland Meeting - October 1875

    The sessions of the Institute were opened on Tuesday evening, October 26th, at Garrett's Hall, by Mr. Charles A. Otis, Chairman of the Local Committee of Arrangements, who welcomed the Institute

  • AIME
    The Conservation of Coal in the United States

    By Edward W. Parker

    IF one is to place any credence at all in the reports published in the daily press, the subject of conservation has been a very lively topic of conversation during the past 60 days, and it does not ap

    Nov 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Geology - An Extension to Moore's Method of Interpretation of Earth Resistivity Measurement

    By V. V. J. Sarma

    Interpretation of earth resistivity data involves not only obtaining depth to interfaces but also determining the nature of formations from their resistivity characteristics. Moore's method of in

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Climax Moly’s 30,000 TPD Henderson Mill is Off the Drawing Board

    By J. D. Vincent, Paul A. Weyler

    Climax Molybdenum's plan for the Henderson 30,000 tpd molybdenite plant didn't just happen. It slowly evolved over a period of 3% years. Many plants cannot afford similar delays, but the Hen

    Jan 5, 1972

  • AIME
    Quicksilver Deposits near Little Missouri River, Southwest Arkansas

    By J. C. Reed

    CINNABAR was discovered in southwestern Arkansas on Little Missouri River in sec. 1, T.7S., R.26W., in April, 1930, and near Antoine Creek in sec. 28, T.6S., R.23W., some 15 miles farther east in May

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Enlarging Magnesium Output a Hundredfold

    By Philip D. Wilson

    SPEED is essentiaI in this war program and it is hard to keep up with developments. When the title of this paper was chosen, the contemplated magnesium production for which plants were then under cons

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Geophysical Abstracts

    By A. C. Lane

    Relations de la profondeur de plissement avec la gravita-tion et la hauteur des montagnes dans les Alpes. Par A. Heim (Zurich) 50me Anniversaire, Livre Jubilaire Soc. Geol. De Belgique, Rome, Fascicul

    Jan 4, 1928

  • AIME
    Development and Use of Industrial Explosives

    By Arthur La Motte

    I NDUSTRIAL explosives, as distinguished from military explosives, include high explosives and blasting powder. The high explosives which are best known are straight dynamite, gelatin dynamite, ammoni

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Superorganizing Professional Engineers

    By A. B. Parsons

    AN often repeated criticism of the profession of engineering is that it is as a whole it lacks solidarity. organization, co-ordination, and leadership. Significantly, the critic, are all engineers. Ot

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Safety in Mining

    By John T., Ryan

    THE subject assigned me, "Safety in Mining," is a very broad one and only the high spots can be covered in this short paper. As this is a meeting of the Coal Division, these remarks will be directed l

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Lake George and Lake Champlain Paper - Note upon a Peculiar Variety of Anthracite

    By Eckley B. Coxe

    I wish to call the attention of the Institute to a peculiar variety of anthracite which occurs in the Buck Mountain vein at our collieries at Drifton, and in the same and other veins in different loca

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Diffusion in the Iron-Chromium System

    By T. Kunitake, H. W. Paxton

    The self-diffusion coefficient of chromium in various alloys in the iron-chromium system has been measured. A variation in Dofrom 10-4 for pure chromium to a maximum of 102 near 60 pct Cr appears with

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Bauxite (311c20cd-c0a7-4e5b-b46d-31937212e6dd)

    By E. C. Harder

    BAUXITE is known mainly as the ore from which aluminum is smelted but it has large use also in the manufacture of artificial abrasives and as a basis for certain chemical industries. A small amount is

    Jan 1, 1949