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  • AIME
    Test Tube To 10,000-Ton Plants - Reminiscence On Experience At Ajo And Inspiration

    By L. D. Rickets

    The principles on which an art is founded are usually few and necessarily basic in nature, but he who wishes to achieve the power to select his aides and give success to important undertakings that ma

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    The Natural-Gas Invasion An Example Of The Sudden Expansion Of Transport

    By E. B. Swanson

    There is only one way to transport natural gas and that is by pipe lines. In the past few years, these lines have been extended rapidly into areas which previously had been served mainly by solid and

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Spokane Paper - Preparing and Recording Samples for Use in Technical Assay-Laboratories

    By Louis D. Huntoon

    After the completion, in 1905, of the Hammond Mining and Metallurgical Laboratory of the Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University, it became necessary to secure and assay a large assortment of ore

    Jan 1, 1910

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Method of Constructing Strata-Maps to Represent Stratification or Bedding

    By James T. B. Ives

    The map exhibited* as an example of my method of construct ing geological strata-maps is essentially an educational appliance. The method, however, is available for the production of maps of comparat

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    The Significance of Manganese in American Steel Metallurgy (a6dceac8-8368-4d26-9578-1640651fe662)

    D. F. HEWETT, Washington, D. C. (communication to the Secretary*).-I am not prepared to discuss the metallurgical use of manganese in the form of alloys. In connection with other work for the U. S. Ge

    Jan 5, 1917

  • AIME
    Papers - Classification - Classification from the Standpoint of the By-product Coke Industry (With Discussion)

    By W. H. Blauvelt

    The only way in which the difficult problems of classification of coal for the manufacture of by-product coke can be solved is to analyze them by the use of scientific data. It is very easy to adop

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Papres - Aviation - Development of Aerial Photographic Equipment

    By W. H. Meyer

    During the seventeen years Fairchild has been making aerial surveys and aerial photographic equipment many changes and improvements have been made in the equipment and in the technique of using it. Ae

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Naturalness

    The key-note of good writing, as of good manners, is B natural. Sincerity is the first requisite for effective writing. When a man says what he knows or believes, he is likely to be interesting, becau

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Robert Howland Leach ? Chairman, Institute of Metals Division, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    TRAINED as a mining engineer and with no little experience in the field of mining, his interests and activities later transferred to the alloying, fabrication, and physical metallurgy of nonferrous me

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    North Central Pennsylvania

    We have seen that the first coal development in Pennsylvania was in the Pittsburgh bed in the southwestern corner of the state. The next mining, in point of time, was done in Clearfield County along t

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Gasification - Significance To The Anthracite Industry

    By Raymond C. Johnson

    GASIFICATION is important to the anthracite industry, as it is to the entire solid-fuel industry and to the nation. However, to the anthracite industry it may have particular significance in that it w

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Petroleum Resources of Japan

    By J. Morgan Clements

    PETROLEUM has been known in Japan since at least 668 A. D., for a picture shows the presentation, during that year, to the Emperor Tenchi (Tenji) of "burning water" and." burning earth" by his subject

    Jan 7, 1922

  • AIME
    Julian E. Tobey, Chairman Coal Division, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    FEW men are better known in fuel engineering circles in the Middle West than the present Chairman of the Coal Division of the A.I.M.E. - Julian Elnathan Tobey. Now vice-president in charge of engineer

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Uniform Mining Law for North America (with Discussion)

    By T. E. Godson

    AS this is the age of reform, a uniform mining law for North America is a moot subject for discussion at this meeting of the Institute. The question is one of peculiarly technical and, in many respect

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Remarks on the Wickersham Process of Refining Pig-Iron

    By Edmund C. Pechin

    I REGRET that I am unable to present this subject in definite form and detail. All I shall attempt at this meeting is to lay before you some curious facts, the bearings and explanations of which must

    Jan 1, 1873

  • AIME
    Salt Lake City Paper - Flotation and the Park-Utah Mine

    By Paul Hunt

    UP to June, 1923, the Park-Utah mine had shipped about 94,000 tons of a direet-smelting ore of a gross value of $4,200,000, or about $45. a ton. These values were in gold and silver only, although the

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    New York Paper - A New Electric Miners’ Lamp

    By David B. Rushmore

    Torches were used by the early Romans for mine-lighting, and these were followed by open lamps or earthen jars filled with tallow or oil, and later by candles. In early coal-mining, explosive gases se

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Use of Oxygenated Air in the Iron Blast Furnace

    By Charles Hart

    THE-report of the advisory committee to the U. S. Bureau of Mines, on the use of oxygen in metallurgy, brings to the art of steelmaking a radical change in the method of operation of the many processe

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Woman Auxiliary Officers

    President MRS. HARRISON SOUDER south Paramus Road Ridgewood, N. J. First Vice-president MRS. ROBERT HURSH New York N. Y. Second Vice-president MRS. RICHARD LLEWELLYN LLOYD Great Neck, L. I&apo

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    PART VI - Papers - The Effects of Temperature and Composition on Crack Propagation in Iron-Silicon Single Crystals

    By W. D. Robertson, J. -P. Briant, M. Gell

    The distribulion of dislocatiorls genevnted during the propagalion of hydrogen-induced cracks in Fe-Si cryslcrls was studied as a funclion of temperature f-110o lo 243°C) and silicorz conlenl (3.1 and

    Jan 1, 1968