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  • AIME
    Oil Prices Satisfactory Though Economic Position Insecure

    By H. D. Wilde

    DURING 1934 conditions in the production division of the petroleum industry were reasonably satisfactory but nevertheless a decided feeling of insecurity existed largely because of the uncertainty of

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Performance Analysis of a Major Steam Drive Project in the Tia Juana Field, Western Venezuela

    By H. J. de Haan, L. Schenk

    Scope for Thermal Recovery in Shell's Heavy Oil Fields in Venezuela The main heavy oil reservoirs on the East coast of Lake Maracaibo (Fig. I), known as "Bolivar Coast", initially contained so

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    The End of the Century (8b444765-b921-401b-b94c-3816957c5e9d)

    By Thomas T., Read

    THE decades immediately before and after the end of the nineteenth century (1890-1910) were a period of increased activity in mineral industry education. One reason for ,this, undoubtedly, was the rap

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Geology - The Need of a New Philosophy of Prospecting, 1960 Jackling Lecture (Mining Engineering Jun 1960, pg 570)

    By L. B. Slichter

    Prospecting is certainly the world's biggest and best gambling business. It is a game where the chips cost many thousands and where many millions, even billions, can be won. An attractive feature

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    3. The Benson Mines Iron Ore Deposit, Saint Lawrence County, New York

    By Edward L. Beutner, Robert M. Crump

    Benson Mines low-grade iron ore reserve is a replacement deposit within the Grenville gneisses of the Adirondacks. The average grade of the crude ore is about 23 per cent iron. The iron minerals are p

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Permeability of Idealized Fractured Rock

    By R. W. Parsons

    The over-all apparent single-phase permeability of fracture-rock systems was studied using two different two-dimensional models. In a strict sense the results are applicable only to these models, yet

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Geology and the New Mines

    By Ira B. Joralernon

    THREATS of a coming metal famine in the United States have filled many columns in magazines and newspapers in the past three years. This asserted menace has diverted attention from the actual results

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    78. New Idria Mining District

    By Robert K. Linn

    The New ldria Mining District is in the southern part of the Diablo mountains of the California Coast Range, 140 miles southeast of San Francisco. The district, noted primarily for quicksilver, also h

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Looking Ahead in Anthracite Production

    By Cadwallader Evans

    MY endeavor in this paper will be to tell something of the accomplishments and current problems of the anthracite producer and to suggest some of the avenues for technical development that seem to me

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Continuous Ore Transport - Belt Conveyor Design and Application

    By R. W. Rausch

    BELT-CONVEYOR 'history in this country dates back to the end of the eighteenth century. Up to 1896 they were crude in design and application. The second era, dating from 1896 to about 1920, saw s

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Coal - Basic Study of Internal Vertical Stress Distribution in Confined Bulk Solids

    By W. J. Verner, J. R. Lucas

    Billions of tons of bulk solid materials are processed through our industrial plants each year, and the tonnage is steadily rising. It has been estimated that for every dollar spent in industry as a w

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    What Is Wrong With Oil Shale?

    By GEORGE ROBERT DE BEQUE

    WHAT is wrong with oil shale? The answer is of interest to the public, to the oil refiner, and to the engineer. Many people have invested in shale land or shale securities, and others would invest if

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Early Mining Reminiscences

    By F. W. Bradley

    MY first Nevada City mining reminiscence is one of seeing Capt. Thomas Mein, over 52 years ago, in the old Wyoming mill on Deer Creek about a mile below the town of Nevada City. Captain Mein was then

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Logging and Log Interpretation - Acoustic Velocity in Porous Media

    By M. Felsenthal

    Engineers are frequently faced with the problem of having to predict oil recovery from a solution gas drive reservoir in the early life of a field. This is often the time when actual laboratory or fie

  • AIME
    Subcollegiate And Vocational Education (6c80551e-916f-45ac-8f91-8fc9347a885f)

    By Thomas T., Read

    IT will be recalled that when educational instruction for the mineral industry began at Freiberg, at the beginning of the eighteenth century, the original aim was to organize and systematize the proce

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Petroleum Engineers Abroad

    By Harry H. Power

    INDUSTRY has the right to expect the petroleum engineering schools to supply more than the minimum technical qualifications necessary to obtain or discharge the responsibilities of a particular job. T

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    The Advance in Mining And Metallurgical Art, Science, and Industry Since 1875.*

    By William P. Shinn

    IT seems proper to present in the Transactions of the Institute, from time to time, formal record of the advances made in the arts and sciences to which our organization is devoted-milestones in the h

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Tin Industry of Yunnan, China

    By MARSHALL D. DRAPER

    CHINA is one of the large producers of the world's tin. About 95 per cent of the total Chinese production comes from the Kotchiu district in the southern part of the province of Yunnan. Yunnan oc

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Acid Open-hearth Process for Manufacture of Gun Steels and Fine Steels (with Discussion)

    By Henry M. Howe, W. P. Barba

    When this country went into the war, but two concerns, The Bethlehem Steel Co. and The Midvale Steel and Ordnance Co., knew how to make steel fit for great cannons and at these concerns there were rel

    Jan 1, 1922