Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization

Sort by

  • AIME
    Nonmetallic Mineral Industries

    By Oliver Bowles

    THE ADVERSE CONDITIONS that have gripped industry during recent years have to some extent submerged technical developments under the more pressing demands of economic problems. Progressive operators,

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Results at Government Oil-Shale Testing Plant

    By M. J. GAVEN

    COMING over from the plant on the Denver and Rio Grande yesterday afternoon I was an interested listener to a smoking-room conversation that had to do with the experimental plant near Rifle. The peopl

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Shaft Sinking at the United States Mine

    By Noel S. Christensen

    COBALT is a silvery white metal with a slight bluish cast, strongly resembling nickel in its appearance and properties, notably its resistance to corrosion, although its alloys with other metals diffe

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Believe It or Not

    By PALMER H. TYLER

    WHEN the Mid-Continent Section of the A. I. M. E. met at the roof garden dining room of the Tulsa Club on Monday evening, May 13, most of the members present came prepared with a credulity-stretching

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Pure Irons - Ancient and Modern

    By J. G. Thompson

    IRON, iron everywhere, but hardly a particle of pure unadulterated iron for the metallurgist to use as a base for the protean characteristics that he develops in the alloys of iron-the modern steels.

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Hazleton the Mecca for Coal Division

    By E. J. Kenaedy, E. H. Robie

    THOUGH the fall meeting of the Coal Division was held in the heart of the anthracite section, at Hazleton, Pa., the bituminous industry was well represented also, and the two groups found much common

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Reports of the Annual Meeting, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    QUALITY and size do not ordinarily go hand in hand, but there is good evidence that both these attributes reached a new peak at the Annual Meeting of the Institute in New York just concluded. Certainl

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Harvey S. Mudd - Official Candidate for Vice-President

    By W. C. PAGE

    HARVEY S. MUDD has the unusual distinction of having virtually inherited a Directorship in the -A.I.M.E., for he was appointed to the Board to fill the unexpired term of his father in 1926. Since then

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Ore Concentration ? Four Plants Use Selective Flotation on Complex Ores

    By T. R. Wright

    THE Corporation operates concentrators in four camps: Casapalca. Morococha, Cerro de Pa-co, and Mahr. The present concentrator at Cerro de Pasco is the newest having been completed in 1943. and that a

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Trepca Mines Limited-II, Essential Geological Features of the Stan Trg Lead-Zinc Ore Body

    By Charles B. Forgan

    THE Stan Trg ore body now being exploited by Trepca Mines, Ltd., originated by the metasomatic replacement of limestone and consists mainly of an intimate mixture of sulfides associated with little ad

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Entertains the Coal Division.

    By AIME AIME

    THE first fall meeting of the new Coal Division started on time on Thursday morning, Sept. 11, at Pittsburgh, with Paul Sterling of the Anthracite Section presiding and over a hundred members and gues

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Securing an Interest in Canadian Gold Properties

    By Louis Doremus Huntoon

    HAVE been asked many times by financial men in New York as to the best way of securing an interest or control of a gold mine in Canada. It must be understood at the start that prospectors and early ow

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Geophysics, Geochemistry, and the Practical Oil Man

    By L. W. Blau

    THE entrance of geophysics and geochemistry into petroleum engineering may be viewed with apprehension by some engineers. They may not remember the time when "practical oil men" opposed the invasion o

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Practical Problems of Postwar Mineral Industries Education

    By J. W. Stewart

    That our American civilization will have extensive postwar problems in such fields as economics, unemployment, and social adjustment is now well understood by all readers of the press and listeners to

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    William B. Plank ? Chairman, Mineral Industry Education Division

    By AIME AIME

    FIFTY years ago William Bertolette Plank was born in Pennsylvania, in which state he was also educated, winding up with an E.M. from Penn State in 1909, at the age of 23. ' He remained there as i

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Safety Education in Schools and Colleges

    By E. A. Holbrook

    AS A whole, engineering schools have not awakened A to the fact that the workmen compensation laws passed in most of our states between 1914 and 1917 effected a quiet but none the less real revolution

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Airplane Transport to Remote Peruvian Mines

    By Charles Will Wright

    THE HIGHLY SPECIALIZED heavy air transport services to mining regions, such as exist in the New Guinea gold fields and in northern Canada, have been even more essential in the development of mines in

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Romantic Andacollo

    By F. R. Koeberlin

    ABOUT thirty miles south of the port of Coquimbo, Chile, nestling in one of the western outliers of the main Andes range, lies the little mining town of Andacollo, a place whose history and traditions

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Eastern Iron Ore Mining

    By ROBERT E. CROCKETT

    MAGNETITE mining and milling in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania continued to remain comparatively inactive during 1933, owing to the low rate of output of the steel industry and also to unrestri

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Discusses Varied Topics

    By T. A. Wright

    THE-Institute of Metals Division opened on Tuesday afternoon with Wheeler P. Davey as chairman and G. E. Edmunds as vice-chairman. Four papers were on the program, two being of a fundamental character

    Jan 1, 1935