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  • AIME
    Employer Practice Regarding Engineering Graduates ? EJC Committee on Economic Status of the Engineer Submits Preliminary Report

    By AIME

    SUPPLEMENTING surveys of the engineering profession regarding salaries and advancement, based upon data from individual engineers, a survey through a questionnaire to employers of engineers has recent

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Milling Kentucky Fluorspar Tailings

    By Robert R. Walden, LeMont West

    K ENTUCKY'S first acid-grade fluorspar flotation Kmill, shown in Fig. 1, was placed in operation Aug. 1, 1952, by the Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Co. at Mexico, Ky. During 1951 a critical sho

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Extractive Mettallurgy Division - Cominco's New Sinter Plant

    By J. F. Mitchell, R. Bainbridge, E. A. Melvin

    IN the fall of 1953, The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co. of Canada Ltd. put into operation a completely new and modern plant for sintering the rather complex assortment of materials which compris

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Two Years' Milling at Bicroft Uranium Mines Ltd

    By I. C. Edwards, W. J. Dengler, D. F. Lillie

    By 1959 the milling plant of Bicr oft Uranium Mines Ltd. had been in operation for two years. During this time many changes, both physical and chemical, had been made in an effort to improve plant eff

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Discussion - Of Mr. Howe's Paper on Piping and Segregation in Steel Ingots (see Trans, xxxviii., 3)

    P. H. Dudley, Yew York, N. Y. (communication to the Secretary*) :—The characteristics of Professor Home's metallurgical papers are, that he is able, from the mass of confusing evidence on the sub

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Proceeding of the One Hundred and Twentieth Meeting at Chicago

    The one hundred and twentieth meeting of the Institute was held at Chicago, Sept. 22 to 26, inclusive, and was in every way success although the steel strike against the United States Steel Corpn. pre

    Jan 11, 1919

  • AIME
    Mining and Metallurgy ? 1924 - Steel Making in Alabama

    By James Bowron

    CONSIDERING the importance of the steel trade and the strategic position occupied in it by the Birmingham District, it may be surprising to many to realize that even the first pig iron smelted with co

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
  • AIME
    The Petroleum Industry - Increased Domestic Business Activity, and the European War Improves the Export Outlook

    By Basil B. Zavoico

    PRODUCTION of crude it in the United States during 1939 totaled about 1.255,776,000 barrels, an average of 3,440,482 barrels per day, 3.41 per cent above the 1938 output of 1,214,355,000 barrels but 1

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Harrisburg, Pa. Meeting

    RACAL COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS Henry McCormick, Chairman; David Watts, Secretary; H. H. Campbell, A S. McCreath, S H. Chauvenet, C. E. Stafford, George S. Comstock, Jones Wister, E. C. Felton, F.

    Jan 1, 1882

  • AIME
    Discussion – Supplement To Technical Publications No. 1782 - Symposium On Cohesive Strength – Class C, Iron Steel Division, No. 372; Class E, Institute Of Metals Division, No.449 - Bridgman, P. W.

    P. W. BRIDGMAN.-Owing to a misunderstanding, I did not see Dr. McAdam's and Dr. MacGregor's remarks on my paper on Flow and Fracture (Metals Technology, December 1944, Pp. 32-38), until afte

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    The "Robbins'' Moles - Status And Future

    By Richard J. Robbins

    Mechanical moles have developed through a tedious process of evolution. At times it has seemed that tunnel borers have been subject to the same Darwinian rules of evolution as their zoological namesak

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    The Roles of Stress Wave and Gas Pressure in Pre-splitting

    By Herbert K. Kutter

    This paper is concerned with the physical phenomena in the fracture process of presplitting and only indirectly with the establishment of the optimum presplitting parameters. Its nature is therefore q

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Copper Blast-Furnace Tops.

    By N. H. Emmons

    (Canal Zone Meeting, November, 1910.) AN interesting development of copper blast-furnace construction has been brought about in adapting the blast-furnace to be a "burner" for sulphuric acid making.

    Feb 1, 1911

  • AIME
    The Drift Of Things (a7e41782-b48f-4b6c-a3be-6b6e33da6fb8)

    By John V. Beall

    Early this year at the University of Arizona in Tucson, a survey was made of student opinion about the minerals industry. Over 100 of the three page questionnaires were completed and these were analyz

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Papers - New Vacuum Valves and Their Applications (Science Lecture)

    By A. W. Hull

    The new valves described in this article are the latest product of the Research Laboratories of the General Electric Co. Some of them are still in the laboratory stage, others have already found impor

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Facts About the Verde and Copper, But Not "Romantic"

    By J. S., Douglas

    IN 1880, the late James Douglas, LL.D., was superintendent of the Chemical Copper Co., operating the Hunt & Douglas process for the treatment of the siliceous copper ores of the Jones mine at Phoenixv

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Water Laws Related to Mining (Mining Engineering, Feb 1960, pg 153)

    By W. A. Hutchins

    Water laws important to the mining industry are those which govern or affect the right to use water, to dispose of water after using it in mining or milling, and to discharge waste material into water

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Mining Education in West Virginia High Schools

    By C. E. LAWAL

    WITH the object of adapting high-school vocational courses to the industrial needs of the community, a few high-school officials in West -Virginia working with the School of Mines of the State univers

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Thermal Balance in a Lead Blast Furnace

    By E. H. Hamilton

    THE furnace on which the following investigation was based had dimensions 48 by 160 in., and was in continuous operation during the three days of the test. The average charge consisted of PER CENT.

    Jan 1, 1924