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A Simple Method for Making Stereoscopic Photographs and Micrographs
By Louis Moyd
In the preparation of illustrations to accompany reports of investigations concerning particle shapes of various natural and manufactured materials proposed for use as fine aggretates in concrete stru
Jan 1, 1949
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1948 Annual Review
By AIME
Generally speaking, the mining industry had a good year in 1948 with most mineral products being produced in record quantities for peacetime standards. The big boys-iron and steel, coal, and petroleum
Jan 1, 1949
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Fuels for Truck Haulage
By A. C. Butterworth
M OST operators of open-pit mines in the Lake Superior iron ore district are quite familiar with the use of fuel oil in the heavy-duty Diesel engines commonly used in truck-haulage service but some op
Jan 1, 1948
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Engineering Training for Professional and Civil Life ? A Proposal to Produce Well-Rounded Engineers ? An Educational Plan Is Suggested for Postgraduates
By John S. Crout
TWENTY-FIVE years ago the training of an engineer was of interest solely to the educator and to the student entering the field. At that time the engineer's position in society was relatively simp
Jan 1, 1947
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Edmund Arnold Anderson - Chairman, Institute of Metals Division, AIME
By AIME
BORN in 1899, in Bridgeport, Conn., E. A. Anderson grew up in a center of the nonferrous metal industry. Perhaps that had something to do with his selection of mining as a career while an undergraduat
Jan 1, 1947
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Bagdad Copper Adopts Open-Pit Mining ? Mill Tonnage Is Increased Tenfold and Costs Greatly Reduced
By Ernest R. Dickie
BRIEFLY, the ore body of the Bagdad Copper Corp., Bagdad, Ariz., is a monzonite porphyry carrying copper values fairly evenly distributed from the surface down through the primary zone. Tabular in sha
Jan 1, 1947
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Must the United States Have A Petroleum Shortage ? An Independent Producer Claims A Free Market Will Provide Crude Oil To Meet All Demands
By Harold B. Fell
MANY oil producers are in disagreement with the idea held by some that an increase in the price of crude oil would be unlikely to stimulate much production and that we will be obliged to draw upon for
Jan 1, 1947
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Capital Requirements of Crude Oil Production - Sharp Upward Trend Seen Both in Total Costs and Per Barrel Produced
By Joseph E. Pogue
FOR a number of years the petroleum department of The Chase National Bank has been making a continuing study of the financial aspects of thirty oil companies. (See Pogue and Coqueron, "Financial Analy
Jan 1, 1946
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Effect of Mill Speeds on Grinding Costs
By Harlowe Hardinge, R. C. Ferguson
Laboratory and plant data covering 12 different operations show that lower than "standard" ball mill speeds increase grinding efficiency. In the case of high pulp-level mills, the gain is so great tha
Jan 1, 1950
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Solar Astronomy at Climax - Studies of Synthetic Eclipses of the Sun Used to Foretell Atmospheric Conditions on Earth
By Walter O. Roberts
A TOTAL eclipse of the sun is a brief, exciting spectacle witnessed by most men but once or twice during a lifetime. But to an astronomer an eclipse of the sun is an event of utmost scientific importa
Jan 1, 1946
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Special Methods for Beneficiation of Glass Sand
By Paul M. Tyler
HISTORICAL concepts of the economics of the glass-sand industry are changing rapidly. The greatly expanded demand for glass containers combined with higher freight rates on raw materials and manufactu
Jan 1, 1950
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Ion Ore Reserves of the Lake Superior District - Shortage of High-Grade Must Make Some Companies Turn Shortly to Taconite Concentration or Imported Ore
By E. W. Davis
THIS nation has been depending upon the Lake Superior iron ranges for most of its iron ore requirements for over half a century. Furthermore, it can continue to draw the major portion of its ore requi
Jan 1, 1947
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Industrial Nonmetallic Minerals
By G. W. Josephson
JUDGING by the progressive atmosphere prevailing in the nonmetallic mineral industries during the past year, postwar conditions were healthful though inflationary. Demand for most industrial mineral
Jan 1, 1948
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New Ideas Rife At Cleveland-Cliffs
By John V. Beall
Cutting costs and increasing safety with new ideas is the byword with The Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. on the Marquette Range in Michigan. Among the new ideas being tried out are mechanical shaft mucking
Jan 1, 1949
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Engineering Problems in Atomic Energy for Industrial Application
By J. A. Hutcheson
NO one questions that it is technically possible to achieve the controlled release of atomic energy in a form that can be converted into heat or electricity. However, before this is actually an accomp
Jan 1, 1948
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Coal Industry Has Biggest Peacetime Year
By Evan Evans
IT is appropriate to evaluate 1947 in review as a year of a peacetime record production of about 676,000,000 tons of coal (anthracite and bituminous), closely approaching the extraordinary wartime out
Jan 1, 1948
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Mechanization and Incentives, Cut Costs at Chief Mine
By John G. Hall
The unstable metal market during 1949, with resulting lower metal prices, has focused every mine operator's attention on the problem of reducing operating costs. Improvement in mining, methods, u
Jan 1, 1950
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Metallurgy of Copper - Experimental Work on Low-grade Oxide and Mixed Ores in Southwest
By M. G. Fowler
A GENERAL decline in copper production for most American producers occurred during the past year as a result of shortage in available labor. Few noteworthy technical developments have been reported; u
Jan 1, 1946
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Scott Turner - An Interview
By John V. Beall
Let's start at the beginning, Mr. Turner. Where and when were you born? In Lansing, Mich., on July 31, 1880. And what was your education? I went to the University of Michigan, where I got an A
Jan 1, 1949
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An Outline of the Geology of the Bingham District
By Hollis Peacock
THE Bingham area in the West Mountain mining district on the eastern slope of the Oquirrh range, some 28 miles southwest of Salt Lake City, has been the most consistent producer for the United States
Jan 1, 1948