Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization
  • AIME
    A Simple Method for Making Stereoscopic Photographs and Micrographs

    By Louis Moyd

    In the preparation of illustrations to accompany reports of investigations concerning particle shapes of various natural and manufactured materials proposed for use as fine aggretates in concrete stru

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Aviation - Aerial Geologizing Most Important of Applications to Mining Industry

    By Theodore Marvin

    FOLLOWING the receipt of questionnaires from many parts of the world, the Aviation Committee is completing a review of the use of aviation in mining and petroleum operations. The summary of this study

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Discussions - Of Mr. Woo's Paper on Silver-Mining and Smelting in Mongolia (see p. 755)

    MR. Woo's succinct description of the mining and smelting of silver-lead in Mongolia, with the roasting-and-reduction process and cupellation, has much interest as a picture of methods that not o

    Jan 1, 1903

  • AIME
    Metal Prices

    By FREDERICW K. BRADLE

    I HAVE been puzzled by two lines of thought'; one emanating from Washington, D. C., to the effect that we must all cheer up, that in a very short time, measured in terms of months, prices would b

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Metallurgy of Copper - Insulation and Suspended Roofs for Reverberatories - An Arc Melting Furnace Installed

    By E. W. Rouse

    THE year 1936 has seen rehabilitation of many plants which had been closed or severely curtailed. The Steptoe smelter of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Co. has been transformed by a rearrangement of t

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    North Lily Development in East Tintic

    By Paul Billingsley

    THE development of the North Lily ground, which lies in the East Tintic district, Utah,. about half a mile northwest of the famous Tintic Standard mine, was undertaken by the International Smelting Co

    Jan 4, 1927

  • AIME
    Future U. S. Demand for Petroleum

    By Stuart St. Clair

    EARLY in 1936, when the American Petroleum Institute issued -J "American Petroleum Industry," which was a survey of the current position of the petroleum industry, and its future outlook, and the figu

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    The Navy's Salvage Program

    By F. Lowell Lawrance

    JOHN SMITH, citizen of the U.S.A., has become so accustomed to reading that Congress has appropriated billions of dollars to pay war costs. that he no longer is impressed by relatively small figures,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Best Year for Gold and the Worst for Silver

    By Scott Turner

    GOLD AND SILVER, the monetary metals, have presented in the last year a striking contrast; gold has experienced unusual prosperity, while silver has been depressed more severely than ever before. Gold

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Trends in Powder Metallurgy

    By Claus G. Goetzel

    POWDER metallurgy is known as the art of producing metal powders and fabricating them in a nonfusion process by a simultaneous or consecutive application of pressure and heat under controlled operatin

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Lead and Its Uses in the Mineral Industries

    By Felix Edgar Wormser

    JUST as the ancients used the products of their crude mining endeavors to fashion tools with which to make digging easier, so today mining enterprises are dependent upon the very metals they mine for

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Iron Ore Mining on Red Mountain, Alabama

    By TENNEY C. DeSOLLAR

    TRADITION tells us that the earliest use of Alabama iron was to make shoes for the horses of General Andrew Jackson and his men during the first part of the nineteenth century. The first recorded inci

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    John Fritz Medal Presented to Herbert Hoover

    By AIME AIME

    THE John Fritz Gold Medal for 1929 was presented to Herbert Hoover at the Executive Mansion on April 25, at a luncheon given by Mr. Hoover to present and past members of the Board of Award, preceding

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Biographical Notice of Benjamin West Frazier, Jr., D.Sc.

    By Edward H. Williams

    IN the middle of the eighteenth century John Frazier and wife, Sarah Ingraham, removed from Boston, Mass., to Philadelphia, Pa., where he was held in such esteem that we find him one of the Committee

    Sep 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Reducing Temperature and Humidity in Deep Mines

    By AIME AIME

    WITH the recent increase in the price of gold, its economic recovery at depths formerly considered impractical has become a present possibility. Two important difficulties must be met: pressure bursts

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Nonferrous Physical Metallurgy.

    By AIME AIME

    WAR undoubtedly accelerates metallurgical progress, although its most obvious effect is a tremendous waste of materials. The necessity for restrictions in normal uses of metals results in a search for

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Metallurgical Cutting for Fabrication, Repair, or Demolition

    By H. H. Moss

    OXYACETYLENE .cutting has experienced rapid development in the last few years and greater advances and expansion and broader application may be expected in the immediate future. Marked changes in cutt

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Don'ts for the Lady Miner

    By Alicia O'Reardon

    DIFFIDENTLY, because don'ts are rarely greeted with cheers; humbly, because I, myself, have never lined up with the irreproachables, I venture on the subject of manners for the mining camp matron

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Suggested Solution of the Silver Problem

    By HARRINCTON EMERSON

    UNEMPLOYMENT is the most ominous shadow ahead of the industrial nations today. Only two great industrial countries are free from unemployment, France and the Soviet Commonwealth. In France the social

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    E. DeGolyer, Fritz Medalist

    By AIME AIME

    EVERETTE LEE DEGOLYER, past President of the Institute and Anthony F. Lucas Medalist, was presented with the John Fritz Medal at a dinner at the Wal-dorf-Astoria Hotel in New York, Jan. 14. Dr. DeGoly

    Jan 1, 1942