Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Basic Trends in Mineral Industries EducationBy Edward Steidle
IT has been said that "the command of nature has been put into the hands of man before he knows how to command himself," and what we see about us gives particular emphasis to this observation. If this
Jan 1, 1933
-
Geological Features of Some Deposits of Bleaching Clay (cc90dbae-3e82-4601-b0b1-476094f33819)By G. Austin Schroter
ALTHOUGH there is now an extensive literature on the bleaching clays, not a great deal of material is to be found concerning the geological fea-tures of these deposits and their bearing on problems of
Jan 1, 1940
-
Geological Features of Some Deposits of Bleaching ClayBy G. Austin Schroter
ALTHOUGH there is now an extensive literature on the bleaching clays, not a great deal of material is to be found concerning the geological fea-tures of these deposits and their bearing on problems of
Jan 1, 1940
-
San Francisco Paper - Slime-FiltrationBy George J. Young
The nature of slimes handled in the treatment of gold- and silver-ores has been discussed in technical literature to a considerable extent. The subject of slime-filtration from the practical worker&ap
Jan 1, 1912
-
Reception-Rooms And Business Headquarters For Members And Guests.By AIME AIME
A separate room in the suite occupied by the American Institute of Mining Engineers on the ninth floor of the United Engineering Society Building, has been equipped with furniture and telephone extens
Jan 5, 1908
-
Water-Cooled Equipment For Open-Hearth Steel FurnacesBy Wm. C. Coffin
THE refractory linings of open-hearth steel furnaces above the bath line are subject to severe wear not only from the heat caused by the combustion of the fuel and the reactions of the bath, but also
Jan 2, 1919
-
Paper - Electrical Methods - Some Applications of Potential Methods to Structural Studies (With Discussion)By E. G. Leonardon, Sherwin F. Kelly
The first to appreciate and foresee the value of applying electrical measurements to structural studies was Prof. Conrad Schlumberger, Professor of Physics at the School of Mines in Paris. One of his
Jan 1, 1929
-
Reception-Rooms And Business Headquarters For Members And GuestsBy AIME AIME
A separate room in the suite occupied by the American Institute of Mining Engineers on the ninth floor of the United Engineering Society Building, has been equipped with furniture and telephone extens
Jan 1, 1908
-
Philadelphia Paper - The Method and Cost of Mining the Red Specular and Magnetic Ores of the Marquette Iron Region of Lake SuperiorBy T. B. Brooks
THE iron ores of the Marquette region are mostly extracted in open excavations; hence the process is more properly quarrying. Several attempts at underground work have been made, which have not, on t
-
Rate Of Diffusion Of Nickel In Gamma Iron In Low-Carbon And High-Carbon Nickel SteelsBy Cyril Wells, Robert F. Mehl
THE two earlier papers in this series1,2 presented data on the rate of diffusion of carbon and of manganese in gamma iron. Apart from their scientific interest, these [] data are needed chiefly in
Jan 1, 1941
-
Devices for Detecting Dangerous Gases in Mine AirBy John Ryan
SIR HUMPHREY DAVY'S epoch-making treatise delivered on Nov. 9, 1815, before the Philosophical Society of London, first announced and demon¬strated a flame safety lamp for detecting methane in min
Jan 2, 1927
-
Institute of Metals Division - Influence of Composition on the Stress-corrosion Cracking of Some Copper-base AlloysBy D. H. Thompson, A. W. Tracy
Season-cracking is a type of failure of brass that results from the simultaneous effect of stress and certain corrodants. The object of this paper is to present data that will aid in a more complete u
Jan 1, 1950
-
Butte Paper - The Reducibility of Metallic Oxides as Affected by Heat Treatment (with Discussion)By Woolsey McA. Johnson
In metallurgical circles it is known widely, but somewhat vaguely, that the ease of reduction of metallic oxides depends largely on the way they hare been prepared. It is likewise known that different
Jan 1, 1914
-
St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - Exploration of Metalliferous DepositsBy W. H. Emmons
The exploration of deposits of the metals will never become an exact science. There will always be an element of uncertainty in prospecting and developing mines. In countries where the surface has bee
Jan 1, 1918
-
Shot Firing in Coal Mines by Electric Circuit from the Surface (8844cea8-7ebc-4517-a257-1fabf2e0f14e)Discussion of the paper of GEORGE S. RICE and H. H. CLARK, presented at the Pittsburgh meeting, October, 1914, and printed in Bulletin No. 94, October, 1914, pp. 2563 to 2571. NORMAN V. BRETH,* Pitts
Jan 4, 1915
-
Crushing and Grinding, III.-Relation of Work Input to Surface Produced in Crushing QuartzBy John Gross
THE method of measurement of surface on quartz particles was given in a previous paper.1 With such a method the relation of surface produced in crushing quartz can be compared to the work in crushing
Jan 1, 1928
-
New York Paper - A Possible Origin of Oil (with Discussion)By Colin C. Rae
The absence of paraffin and other oil hydrocarbons in the soil although they are concentrated in extensive deposits in some localities, the common distribution of plant remains through many formations
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - A Possible Origin of Oil (with Discussion)By Colin C. Rae
The absence of paraffin and other oil hydrocarbons in the soil although they are concentrated in extensive deposits in some localities, the common distribution of plant remains through many formations
Jan 1, 1923
-
New York Paper - Stamp Mills of Lake SuperiorBy John F. Blandy
Every new mining district has had its own peculiar experiences in inventing and experimenting upon new methods for the various operations of mining, and more particularly in the processes of crushing
-
Filled Stopes - Mining Methods of the Silver King CoalitionBy Robert S. Lewis
Park City, Utah, elevation 7200 ft., is on the eastern slope of the Wasatch Mountains about 25 miles southeast of Salt Lake City, elevation 4200 ft. The town and surrounding mining district are served
Jan 1, 1925