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  • AIME
    Hot-Dip Galvanizing-Zinc's Biggest Consumptive Use

    By John G. McLain

    OF all the zinc that the world consumed in 1936-'38 the United States took about 31 per cent, and almost 14 per cent of the world's zinc supply in that period was used for galvanizing purpos

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Underground Mining of Phosphate Rock at Conda, Idaho

    By E. M. Norris

    THE Western phosphate deposits extend over a large area in the Rocky Mountain region, comprising portions of south central Montana, southeastern Idaho, northeastern Utah, and southwestern Wyoming. A l

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Computer Control Improves Metallurgy At Tennessee Copper's Flotation Plant

    By Bobby P. Faulkner

    The Tennessee Copper Co.'s flotation plant, refer- T red to as London Mill, processes approximately 4800 tons of a massive complex sulfide ore per day. The ore is predominantly pyrrhotite and pyr

    Jan 11, 1966

  • AIME
    Important Meetings at Headquarters

    By AIME AIME

    THE following Officers, Directors, and guests were present: Herbert Hoover, A. R. Ledoux, Henry S. Drinker, Edwin Ludlow, Samuel A. Taylor, Charles F: Rand, William M. Corse, Arthur S.. Dwight, Glen H

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Refining ' Petroleum By Liquefied Sulphur Dioxide

    By L. Dr. Edeleanu

    CRUDE petroleum is a mixture of various groups of hydrocarbons and some bodies containing oxygen or sulphur. These constituents possess properties differing considerably one from another and the propo

    Jan 9, 1914

  • AIME
    Geology, Mining and Processing of Diatomite at Lompoc, Santa Barabara County, California (d34c6d91-e6cc-4c5d-8be4-5ddaf5783e6a)

    By Henry Mulryan

    THE largest and purest known deposit of diatomite is being actively mined and processed 3 ½ miles south of Lompoc, Santa Barbara County, Calif., by the Johns-Manville Products Corporation. The working

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Recent Mining and Metallurgical Education (b2da2345-6cf3-4b1f-bf03-a78c369a2d6f)

    By Thomas T., Read

    IT will be recalled that the first professor of metallurgy in the United States, appointed in 1855, never really gave any instruction in metallurgy and gradually turned into a professor of mineralogy.

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Polish Coal Mining Rejuvenated

    By AIME

    After an adventurous past-four changes of government in thirty years -the whole of Silesia and attached coal territories have become part of the Polish State. The coal resources of this area are the b

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Mineral Industry Education

    By William R. Chedsey

    ALTHOUGH few changes can be reported in educational methods at the mineral technology schools during 1940, other events have taken place of direct interest to, and that will have a profound effect upo

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    A Look at the US Bureau of Mines' Minerals Availability System

    A comprehensive, systematically structured mineral evaluation system is a prime requirement for objectively assessing mineral supply impacts on the economy. The Minerals Availability System developed

    Jan 9, 1977

  • AIME
    Method of Curtailing Forces at the Copper Queen - Discussion

    THE CHAIRMAN (F. K. COPELAND,* Chicago, Ill.).-At this particular time conditions existing in this, country, and elsewhere, make all questions of milling or smelting or mining, or anything else, absol

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    This Phosphate Industry of Ours

    By Chester A. Fulton

    SUPPLYING as it does a necessity for healthy animal and vegetable phosphate production is a most important industry. We human beings also are animal as this war so surely proves. Unlike many other ele

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Recycling Milling Water In Missouri's New Lead Belt

    By Franklin H. Sharp, Kenneth L. Clifford

    During the last few years the New Lead Belt of Southeastern Missouri has become the main source of lead in the United States. It also produces significant amounts of zinc, copper and silver. The mines

    Jan 7, 1973

  • AIME
    A New Separator for the Removal of Slate from Coal

    By W. S. Ayres

    A BRIEF history of the growth of the anthracite-coal preparation will give a better view-point from which to judge the present problem of separating slate from coal. At the beginning of the commercia

    Dec 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Student Associates (8f479a29-91fa-463b-b5b0-725917f76629)

    Adams, Benjamin C., Jr., Student, Univ. of Oklahoma Norman, Okla. '36 Adams, Ernest C., Student, Univ. of Illinois 908 W. Green St., Urbana, Ill. '35 Adams, George H., Student, Colorado S

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Number of Pages

    By Walter W. Bradley

    AT ONE TIME OR ANOTHER and in greater or less amounts, gold has been mined in at least 40 of California's 58 counties. It may not be inappropriate, by way of introduction, to give a brief histori

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Advantages of Butane Over Gasoline and Steam Engines in the Oil Fields

    By L. R. Smith

    BUTANE OPERATED drilling rigs are a recent innovation in the petroleum industry, so extensive data on their operation are not available. However, experience indicates that, within limitations, as much

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    New York Talcs, Their Geological Features, Mining, Milling, and Uses

    By E. J. ENGEL

    The New York talc deposits of commercial importance are in St. Lawrence and Lewis counties, in the northwest Adirondack Mountains (Fig 1). All of the deposits are of pre-Cambrian age and occur within

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    A Preliminary Look At Lunar

    By S. H. Penn

    One of the more challenging aspects of the unfolding age of space travel centers about the opportunity for man to use the natural resources of other worlds. The first of the extraterrestrial worlds to

    Jan 3, 1966

  • AIME
    Mining and Metallurgy - Oil Production

    By H. J. Wasson

    WITH the close of 1932 and the third year of the depression, the activity of oil production presents, amidst the general wreckage and chaos of industrial society, a somewhat unique picture of rational

    Jan 1, 1933