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  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Secondary Recrystallization in Copper Wire

    By Guido Bassi

    IT is known'" that secondary recrystallization occurs in copper sheet with at least 90 pct reduction after annealing at high temperatures, 700" to 1000°C. Turkalo and Turnbull4 have found recentl

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Spokane Paper - Cyaniding Slime

    By Mark R. Lamb

    The various methods of treating pulp in air-agitation tanks offer problems for experiment and study which are fascinating as well as practical. The usual method heretofore has been to fill each tank i

    Jan 1, 1910

  • AIME
    A Mining Company Balance Sheet

    By George Wolff

    To THE average person, the purport of the items and figures on the balance sheet of a mining company are hazy and the real financial condition of the company is cloaked in obscurity. It is also likely

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Micrographic Detection Of Carbides In Ferrous Alloys

    By Norman Pilling

    The micrographic analysis of silicon steels is possible if a dilute solution of nitric acid and methyl alcohol in nitrobenzol is used. The action of this reagent differs from that of sodium picrate in

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Ore-Dressing Improvements.

    By Robert Richards

    Introduction. WALTER RENTON INGALLS recently gave a very interesting talk before the student mining society of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In it he showed the present status of mining

    Jan 9, 1913

  • AIME
    Lead-Silver Mines Of Gilmore, Lemhi County, Idaho.

    By Ralph Nichols

    THE mines are near the town of Gilmore, in the Texas mining district. This district was organized in 1880. The present producing mines are near the terminus of the Gilmore & Pittsburg railroad. This r

    Jan 11, 1913

  • AIME
    Suggestions For Conservation Of Petroleum By Control Of Production Suggestions For Conservation Of Petroleum By Control Of Production Suggestions For Conservation Of Petroleum By Control Of Production

    By Henry Doherty

    FOR many years more money was spent in the search for and the production of gold than the gold that was produced was worth. The same thing is now true of petroleum. More money is spent for the search

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    Education - What Does Industry Have a Right to Expect of Petroleum Engineering Schools? (TP 2270, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1947, with discussion)

    By P. H. Bohart

    THe answer to the title question will be found by considering the ultimate influence of the petroleum engineers on industry and by considering the tools with which petroleum engineers must be equipped

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Education - What Does Industry Have a Right to Expect of Petroleum Engineering Schools? (TP 2270, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1947, with discussion)

    By P. H. Bohart

    THe answer to the title question will be found by considering the ultimate influence of the petroleum engineers on industry and by considering the tools with which petroleum engineers must be equipped

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Graphitization Of White Cast Iron

    By R. S. Archer

    THE PROPER representation of equilibria involving graphitic carbon in the constitutional diagram of the iron-carbon system is admittedly an unsolved problem. The complete solution of the problem will

    Jan 2, 1920

  • AIME
    Production - Foreign - W. A. J. M. Van Waterschoot Van Der Gracht

    By B. B. Cox

    Iraq, formerly called Mesopotamia in Asiatic Turkey, became a kingdom under British Mandate after the world war and is expected to gain its independence in 1932 when it enters the League of Nations. T

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Bauxitic Raw Materials

    By James W. Shaffer

    Aluminum is the most abundant metallic element of the earth's crust and is a constituent of nearly every type of rock (Clark, 1924, p. 13). The sources of aluminum and aluminous material most com

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Groundwater Influx into a Vertical Mine Shaft

    By M. T. Worley

    This paper reports investigative work conducted to develop a method of estimating the groundwater influx from a homogeneous permeable formation into a vertical mine shaft during sinking. A method of a

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Strontium

    By Robert B. Fulton

    Commercially, celestite (SrSO,) is the only significant strontium mineral. Among other strontium-bearing minerals, only strontianite (SrCO,) occurs commonly; however, it is not an item of commerce.

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering Equipment - A Liquid-Freon Permeameter

    By B. G. Hurd

    A liquid-Freon permeameter suitable for making routine permeability determinations on small plug samples is described. The instrument is characterized by simplicity of design and ease of operation, an

  • AIME
    Valuation of Coal Properties

    By John Dilworth

    THIS paper treats primarily of the valuation of developed coal properties by the method of capitalizing their estimated average future earnings. However, in it reference is also made to valuations of

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Marquette’s Rodpeb Mill Pioneers New Grinding Method For Cement Industry

    By J. W. Moody

    The first Rodpeb mill ever built and placed in full scale successful operation went onstream in mid- 1960 at Marquette Cement Manufacturing Co.'s newly modernized portland cement production plant

    Jan 4, 1963

  • AIME
    Employment Of Mine Labor -Discussion (3710f527-eac3-46b2-abdf-53422a4da2c8)

    C. W. GOODALE, * Butte, Mont.-In regard to the employment manager, the North Butte Mining Co. has undertaken that line of work and the rest of the companies are watching the experiment. If it is prove

    Jan 4, 1919

  • AIME
    New Mining Devices - A Special Shaft Bar

    By J. W. Gilbert

    DuriNG the sinking of the Needmore shaft, on one of the leases of the Eagle-Picher Mining and Smelting Co north of Webb City, Missouri, a very strong flow of water was encountered at a depth of 140 ft

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Chattanooga Paper - Sulphur in Gaseous Fuels

    By F. Louis Grammer

    The difference between blast-furnace gas and ordinary producer-gas is chiefly that blast-furnace ga,s is higher in CO2 and lower in hydrocprbons and hydrogen, as is shown in Table I. Table I.— Volu

    Jan 1, 1909