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  • AIME
    Mining Methods - Barberton Limestone Mine

    By H. F. Haller

    COLUMBIA-SOUTHERN'S Barberton limestone mine, 8 miles southwest of Akron, Ohio, is a million-ton-per-year producer from a depth of over 2200 ft in a district where other underground mining at thi

    Jan 12, 1954

  • AIME
    Papers - Aluminum-copper-nickel Alloys of High Tensile Strength Subject to Heat-treatment (With Discussion)

    By Paul D. Merica, W. A. Mudge

    One of the most prominent features of our present-day industrial development is the ever-increasing demand put upon materials of construction. Engineering ingenuity, within the past 25 years, has been

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Fluxes

    By Frederick V. Lawrence

    Broadly speaking, fluxes are substances which promote wetting and spreading or enhance the fluidity and manipulative properties of materials in joining, fusion, and smelting operations. The term most

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Relationships Of Assumed Condition Of Mine Roof And The Occurrence Of Roof Falls In Eastern Kentucky Coal Fields

    By Alan D. Smith

    Mine roof fall characteristics of 250 falls in 5 different room-and-pillar coal mines, located in Pike, Martin, and Floyd counties, were investigated to determine the relationship of selected paramete

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    Chicago Discussions - Discussion of paper Prof. ?kermann (See p . 265)

    Joseph HartshoRnE, Pottstown, Pa.: I have read Professor Akerman's valuable paper with great interest. Few of the present generation of American steel metallurgists are aware of the very importan

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Engineering Evaluation of Coal Refuse Slurry Impoundments (TRANSACTIONS - VOL. 258)

    By Robert L. Zook, Bernard J. Olup, James J. Pierre

    Coal refuse slurry impoundments are dams constructed of coarse coal refuse to impound fine refuse (slurry) and water (25 to 30% solids). Both products are waste from coal preparation plants. A number

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Coal

    By George R. Eadie

    As 1972 slipped through our grasp, coal industry adjustments to health and safety laws, environmental restrictions, rising costs and higher production targets left many mine operators groping for a ne

    Jan 2, 1973

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Colloid Chemistry and Metallurgy

    By Wilder D. Bancroft

    It is eight years since I have been connected actively with metallography, but in this time I have been learning something about colloid chemistry, which may be considered as the chemistry of bubbles,

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Forms of Sulfur in Coke, and Their Relations to Blast-furnace Reactions (with Discussion)

    By S. P. Kinney

    Sulfur has been one of the most troublesome elements encountered since the earliest days of iron smelting, and this problem will become of increasing importance as the higher sulfur coke is used, beca

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Mine-drainage Stream Pollution (with Discussion)

    By Andrew B. Crichton

    No more important question has come before the coal industry in the past decade than the prevention of stream pollution by mine drainage; especially in Pennsylvania, where large areas of coal land hav

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Papers - Effect of Composition on Mechanical Properties and Corrosion Resistance of Some Aluminum-alloy Die Castings (With Discussion)

    By J. J. Bowman, E. H. Dix

    A lack of experimental data illustrating the effect of composition, particularly in respect to impurities, on the mechanical properties and corrosion resistance of aluminum-alloy die castings induced

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Tarnish Films on Copper (T. P. 1008, with discussion)

    By J. B. Dyess, H. A. Miley

    Tarnish films on some of the common metals (particularly on copper and silver) have been of much scientific and commercial concern for a long time, but before the development of the electrical method1

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Measurements of Physical Properties - Capillary Pressure Investigations

    By Harry W. Brown

    This paper presents results of static capillary pressure measprements made both by the restored-state and by the mercury-injection methods, and of dynamic capillary pressure measurements made by the H

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Some Properties of Pseudowavellite from Florida (Correction p. 702)

    By W. L. Hill, W. H. Armiger, S. D. Gooch

    The physical properties, chemical behavior under thermal treatment, and fertilizer value of fluorine-containing pseudowavellite (hydrous calcium aluminum phosphate) that occurs as phosphate clay admix

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Papers - Copper Embrittlement, IV (T. P. 1197, with discussion)

    By L. L. Wyman

    The resultant embrittlement caused by the exposure of oxygen-bearing copper when hot and exposed to reducing gases has been the subject of many studies.' Little attention, however, has been given

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Papers - Well Logging - Natural Potentials in Well Logging (T. P. 1626)

    By W. M. Rust, W. D. Mounce

    The almost universal acceptance of electrical logging by the petroleum industry calls for a critical examination of the physical bases of the common methods. This is particularly needed for the natura

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Experimental Observations Concerning the Collapse of Dislocation Loops During Annealing

    By Jack Washburn

    The c axis indentations in zinc crystals were shown to undergo 100 pct strain recovery on heating. The mode of deformation and the details of the polygonization and collapse of indentations were found

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Conservation And Economic Theory

    By Richard Ely

    Conservation Means Preservation, Improvement, Justice CONSERVATION, narrowly and strictly considered, means the preservation in unimpaired efficiency of the resources of the earth; or in a condition

    Jan 2, 1916

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - New Angles to the Apex Law

    By John A. Shelton

    One of the heaviest burdens uselessly cast by our mineral land laws upon the holder of the title conveyed by a patent from the United States is due to the provision excepting known veins from land pat

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Production Of High-Grade Blast-Furnace Coke

    By H. M. Chance

    RECENT research work has shown that coal can be produced, at reasonable cost, from almost all coal-mining districts containing not more than 3 to 8 per cent. of ash. From coal so produced, an abundant

    Jan 6, 1924