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  • AIME
    The Growing Pains of Aussie's Iron Ore Industry

    Although Australia is the world's second biggest producer of iron ore, the last few years have not been easy for companies in Western Australia's Pilbara region (see map) where more than 90%

    Jan 1, 1977

  • AIME
    The Occurrence Of Stibnite At Steamboat Springs, Nevada

    By Waldemar Lindgren

    THE important investigations of Dr. G. F. Becker at Steamboat Springs, Nev., in 1885, aided by the analytical work of W. H. Melville, established the fact that sulphides were being deposited at the su

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    The United States Gypsum Company Mine, Heath, Montana

    By Gerald C. Mathis

    FERGUS County, Mont., shown in Fig. 1, is known for its once famous gold mines near the old towns of Gilt Edge, Maiden, and Kendall. But at Heath, a small farming community near the foot-hills of the

    Jan 2, 1953

  • AIME
    Duluth Paper - The Chapin Iron-Mine, Lake Superior

    By Per Larsson

    The Chapin Mine, on the Menominee range, Lake Superior, was first opened in 1880 and has since then produced 1 1/2 million tons of soft blue hematite, containing about 63 per cent. of iron and 0.07 pe

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Reservoir Rock Characteristics - Characteristics of the Delaware Formation

    By R. E. Jenkins

    The Bell Canyon member of the Delaware Mountain group has yielded quite a large number of fields in which completion and production problems have been numerous and complex. Reserves are difficult to e

  • AIME
    The Hardness Of Certain Primary Copper Solid Solutions

    By J. H. Frye, J. W. Caum

    ONE of the most important methods of increasing the hardness of metals is alloying. In spite of the widespread use of alloys, the fundamental mechanism of alloy hardening is little understood. This is

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Block-caving at the Sunrise Iron Mine, Wyoming

    By George Rupp

    THE Sunrise iron mine of The Colorado Fuel and Iron Corporation is in Platte County, Wyoming, about 110 miles north of Cheyenne. It is served by the company-owned Colorado and Wyoming Railway, which c

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Hydrogeologic Overview Of The Nuclear Waste Isolation Program

    By Irwin Remson

    Some unique hydrogeologic issues are inherent in the problems of siting, designing and licensing a mined geologic high-level nuclear waste repository. The problems involve hydrogeologically unfamiliar

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    Meet The Authors (c457e900-d919-4630-a8f7-8d7253d7c37d)

    W. N. Triplett (Geology of the Silver-Lead-Zinc Deposits of the Avalos-Providencia District of Mexico, P. 583) was born in Tecumseh, Mich., and attended the University of Michigan and Massachusetts In

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Note Upon The Cost Of Bessemer Steel Rails

    By P. Barnes

    SEVERAL interesting and important considerations may be based upon an analysis of the cost of producing Bessemer rails, and the facts thus set forth may be much more clearly emphasized by reducing eac

    Jan 1, 1877

  • AIME
    A Study Of The Flotative Properties Of Magnetite

    By W. E. Keck, Paul Jasberg

    THE flotative properties of the principal minerals in Michigan's potential iron ores have been investigated to develop methods of beneficiation for the ores. One of these minerals, magnetite, is

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Auriferous Slate Deposits Of The Southern Mining Region

    By P. H. Mell

    CAN the auriferous slate deposits of the Southern mining region ever be successfully worked? is a question that has been often asked me by persons seeking investments in Southern mines. As the subject

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Chattanooga Paper - Notes on the Leadville Ore-Deposits

    By Charles M. Rolker

    It is not my purpose to present a complete description, still less a thorough discussion from a theoretical stand-point, of the Leadville ore-deposits. Hence I have given to this paper the more modest

    Jan 1, 1886

  • AIME
    Growth Of Longwall Technologies In The United States

    By William E. Souder, Eugene R. Palowitch

    INTRODUCTION The longwall method of mining coal underground is now a highly developed and accepted mining technology. However, it was only through a long history of successes and failures that this

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    Stratigraphy Of The Mascot-Jefferson City Zinc District

    By Howard W. Miller, Charles R. L. Oder

    APPROXIMATELY 5000 tons of zinc ore a day was mined during 1943 in the Mascot-Jefferson City district in East Tennessee. This ore came from the Kingsport formation, a part of the Knox dolomite, of Ord

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Geology Of The Nickel Mountain Mine, Riddle, Oregon

    By Louis A. Mattson, Winthrop A. Rowe, John T. Cumberlidge, Victor M. Mejia

    The parent ultramafic of Nickel Mountain is an alpine-peri-dotite. Compositional layering and late stage dunites suggest the intrusive crystallized in the upper mantle or lower crust. The ultramafic m

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Essential Considerations In The Design Of Blast Furnaces

    By A. L. Foell

    THE development of the modern blast furnace began more than one hundred years ago, with the abandonment of the small hillside furnaces. Its development, especially during the past 50 years, has been a

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    What’s Behind the Mining Boom in Southeast Missouri

    By John V. Beall

    On the banks of Huzzah Creek there is a roadhouse where a group of Ozark folks were whiling away a Sunday afternoon last spring. "How about some of that 'Who Broke the Lock Off the Hen House Door

    Jan 7, 1963

  • AIME
    Cyaniding Clayey Ore at the Buckhorn Gold Mine

    By Paul Cook

    THE ore deposit of the Buckhorn Mines Co., Buckhorn, Nev., is peculiar in being a shallow kaolinized mass of material with basalt walls, and having apparently no direct connection with any of the usua

    Jan 9, 1916

  • AIME
    Geology Of The Zaruma Gold District Of Ecuador

    By Paul Billingsley

    IN THEIR course across Ecuador, the Andes fail to show the mineral wealth with which they abound in Peru, Bolivia, and Chile. This may well be due merely to the concealment of recent volcanic ash and

    Jan 10, 1925