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  • AIME
    Off-Highway Trucks in the Mining Industry

    By Alan K. Burton

    An industry-wide demand for bigger and more efficient trucks, with their supposed economies of scale, is well established. Some trucks have been, and often are brought "off the shelf," with the manufa

    Jan 8, 1975

  • AIME
    Copper and Copper-Rich Alloys - A White high-manganese Brass (Metals Technology, June 1945)

    By J. R. Long, T. R. Graham, C. W. Matthews, R. S. Dean

    In a previous paper! the authors reported on the mechanical properties of a 65 per cent copper, 10 per cent manganese, 25 per cent zinc alloy as compared with, similarly processed cartridge brass. Add

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Drilling The Cane Creek No. 2 Shaft

    By K. J. Kutz, F. A. Nice

    Drilling of the second shaft at Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.'s Cane Creek potash operation southwest of Moab, Utah, is perhaps the largest undertaking ever made by private industry in the field of rota

    Jan 9, 1968

  • AIME
    Mining Methods At The Copper Queen Mines

    By Joseph Hodgson

    IN 1880, mining operations were commenced at the Copper Queen mine. The famous Queen orebody, which extended to the surface, was first quarried from a large open cut in the outcrop. The orebody was fo

    Jan 8, 1914

  • AIME
    Ore-dressing Practice in the Joplin District

    By Clarence Wright

    THE average lead and zinc content of the ores mined and milled in the Joplin district is low as compared with that of other lead and zinc deposits throughout the United States. Because of this fact an

    Jan 10, 1917

  • AIME
    Logging - The SP Log in Shaly Sands

    By H. G. Doll

    As a continuation of the earlier paper on the general subject of the SP log, a more complete analysis of certain features of the SP log in shaly sands is given. The pseudo-static SP in front of shaly

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Production - Foreign - Petroleum in the Indian Empire

    By Eric J. Bradshaw

    For several hundred years the petroleum industry has flourished in Burma and at the close of the eighteenth century there were over five hundred producing wells in the Yenangyaung field. These were la

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The India Mica Industry

    By A. Faison Dixon

    In India the production of mica, which in other countries is of very minor importance, is one of the staple, long established industries, and ranks high in the statistics of mineral products. Nearly t

    Jan 1, 1914

  • AIME
    The Diffusion Rates For Carbon In Austenite

    By F. E. Harris

    IT has been said that carbon is "ubiquitous" with reference to iron alloys. Certainly at temperatures where carbon and iron form the solid solution, austenite, it may be readily added to, or removed f

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - The Newport Iron-Mine

    By B. W. Vallat

    The Newport mine, located at Ironwood, gogebic county, Mich., on the Gogebic iron-range, is owned and operated by the Newport Mining Co., for the mining of iron-ore. I. GEOLOGY. The general geol

    Jan 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Application Of Pyrometry To The Ceramic Industries

    By C. B. Thwing

    IT is likely that among most races, owing to the ease of finding and working clay, the making of clay utensils was learned earlier than the molding of metal implements. The ancients made good pottery

    Jan 9, 1919

  • AIME
    Pillar Recovery at the Pea Ridge Mine

    By J. C. Irvine

    Meramec Mining Co., a joint venture of Bethlehem Steel Corp. and St. Joe Minerals Corp., mines and pelletizes iron ore at the Pea Ridge mine. The Pea Ridge property is located near Sullivan, Miss., ab

    Jan 9, 1976

  • AIME
    Safety Practices of the Koppers Coal Company

    By L. C. Campbell

    THE purpose of any accident-prevention program is the curtailment or entire elimination of injuries and fatalities. It is a job that is never finished in the coal-mining industry. Day by day, on shift

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Heat Utilization - The Recirculating Furance (with Discussion)

    By L. A. Mekler

    The recirculating furnace is primarily a heating apparatus of the convection type in which the heat-absorbing surfaces are heated by a mixture of fresh products of combustion and a portion of the comb

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Colorado Paper - The Phosphate-Deposits of Arkansas

    By John C. Branner

    Stratigraphic Position of the Deposits.—During the progress of the geological survey of Arkansas, in the northern part of that State, it was found that the interval between recognizable Lower Silurian

    Jan 1, 1897

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Thermodynamics of Iron-Silicate Slags: Slags Saturated With Solid Silica

    By R. Schuhmann, E. J. Michal

    Experimental measurements are reported for the oxygen pressures of iron-silicate slags in equilibrium with solid silica. CO2-CO mixtures were bubbled through the slags in silica crucibles to find equi

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Remarks on the Waste in Coal Mining

    By R. P. Rothwell

    AT this our first meeting I beg to call the attention of the members of our Institute to what is certainly a question of the greatest possible importance to the industries we represent; and more parti

    Jan 1, 1873

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - The Longwall System of Mining

    By J. W. Harden

    APART from the merits of the respective systems of mining under conditions alike, there is much in the nature of the coal and the measures with which it is associated, to make that system which is suc

  • AIME
    Certain Ore Deposits Of The Southwest -Discussion

    W. G. MITCHELL,* New York, N. Y.-I quite agree with Mr. Wilson1 in the statement that the Bonanza copper orebodies of the Jerome District are definitely pre-Cambrian. You might go much further than th

    Jan 4, 1919

  • AIME
    The Treatment of Fine Particles During Flotation

    By T. P. Meloy

    The behavior of slime-sized particles in a flotation cell is neither well documented nor well understood. In general, slimes (or 'fines' as they will be alternatively called in this chapter)

    Jan 1, 1962