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  • CIM
    Notes on Fire Prevention and Fire Insurance for Mine Buildings

    By W. G. Millar

    Until a fire occurs, insurance and prevention work are often looked on as unavoidable necessities, but as insurance is back of all business credit, it is essential to know that in case of damage money

    Jan 1, 1928

  • CIM
    Demonstrations and Discussion on Geophysical Methods of Prospecting: The Electromagnetic Method

    By Etienne S. Bieler

    Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen, I come to you tonight distinctly as a physicist, not as a geologist or a mining man. My experience in applied geophysics has been short, and I do not doubt that man

    Jan 1, 1928

  • CIM
    Some Economic Aspects of the Gold Mining Industry

    By J. Edwin Van Buskirk

    For a country that is as important a gold producer as Canada, the return to the gold standard of the major commercial countries of the world during the past five years is of particular significance. T

    Jan 1, 1928

  • NIOSH
    RI 2859 Portable Electric Cap Lamps In Alabama ? Introduction

    By Frank E. Cash

    The Bureau of Mines in its safety work has for a number of years advocated and recommended the use of permissible portable electric cap lamps for use in all mines. In the course of time required for t

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    European Blast-Furnace Practice

    By Meissner, C. A.

    THE tendency all over Europe, just as it is with us, is to go to the use of turbines for new construction or replacement of old steam or even gas engines. 'The lower construction cost and the low

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Chromium Alloys

    By Becket, Frederick M.

    CHROMIUM is but one hundred and thirty years of age-a mere youngster as related to many metals that' have speeded world progress. It was Vauquelin of France who proved conclusively that the so ca

    Jan 1, 1928

  • CIM
    Copper in the Eastern Townships

    By John A. Dresser

    Seventy years ago a period of prospecting and mining activity began in the Eastern Townships of Quebec that seems to have been quite equal to that of recent years in the Rouyn field. In the following

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Enlightened Self-Interest in the Copper Industry: Its Results and Promise

    By Notman, Arthur

    THIS is a day of surpluses, some good and some not so good. One can hardly pick up a newspaper, magazine, review or economic treatise without confronting the fact that we have or are threatened with m

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Mining Schools of the Future

    F A. THOMSON, president of the Montana School of Mines, gave an interesting talk on mining schools of the past, present and his ideas of the future before a recent meeting of the Montana Section of th

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Commercial Movement of Zinc and Copper

    By Salinger, Herbert

    WITH the large amount of metallurgical re- search work now being done and the constant effort of the engineer to effect economies of operation, I think it is a safe prediction that the next few years

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Selecting the Right Man

    THE problem of picking the best students for an engineering college can no longer, be considered as simply one of determining the amount of general ability, but rather of finding special aptitudes for

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Suggested Improvements For Smelting Copper In The Reverberatory Furnace

    By G. L. Oldright

    THE development of the reverberatory furnace for smelting copper ores up to 1912 was described by E. P. Mathewson1 with details concerning the great changes in dimensions of the furnace. Hayward2 tabu

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Early Gem Mining; Real and Otherwise

    By V 9. 0 / 300 dpi

    ATHOUGH turquoise mining was, so far as we know, the first large, well-organized mining operation,' gem mining, from the Roman con-quest of Egypt until the opening of the South African pipe diamo

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    The Open Mind and the Open Forum

    By Smith, George Otis

    THE matter that I have on my mind this evening is engineering's need of an open forum. Our fathers of three centuries ago were pro-testanta for freedom of speech and thought in matters religious;

    Jan 1, 1928

  • NIOSH
    Precipitation Of Lead And Copper From Solution On Sponge Iron - Abstract Of Bulletin

    By G. L. Oldright

    As sponge iron is much like porous, coarse sand, it is a tempting material to use in place of coarse scrap iron as a precipitant of metals, for scrap iron is relatively awkward to handle and exposes o

    Jan 1, 1928

  • CIM
    Canada's Future in Copper

    By S. J. Cook

    Copper, a world commodity, and the first metal used by man, played a great part in the beginnings of modern civilization, which rests so dependently on the utilization of metals. Then, long after the

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    The Forrester Cell Installation At The Nevada Consolidated Copper Co.'s McGill Concentrator

    By E. H. Mohr

    AT the McGill concentrator of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Co., all flotation operations have been carried out in Forrester cells since November, 1926. In respect to cost of operation, the new cell

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Salt Lake City Paper - Flotation of Custom Lead-zinc-iron Ores as Practiced by the International Smelting Co.'s Tooele Plant (with Discussion)

    By W. J. McKenna

    The International Smelting Co. concentrator at Tooele, Utah, first operated on a custom basis for the treatment of lead-zinc-iron ores on Nov. 1, 1924, with a capacity of 500 tons per day. On May 1, 1

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Development Of Selective Flotation At Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s Plant At Bauer, Utah

    By R. J. Evans

    THE Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s plant is at Bauer, Utah. It was built primarily to treat ore from the Combined Metals mine at Pioche, Nevada. Shortly after its completion, the company acquire

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Salt Lake City Paper - Development of Selective Flotation at Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s Plant at Bauer, Utah

    By R. J. Evans

    The Combined Metals Reduction Co.'s plant is at Bauer, Utah. It was built primarily to treat ore from the Combined Metals mine at Pioche, Nevada. Shortly after its completion, the company acquire

    Jan 1, 1928