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  • AIME
    Thickening Leach Residues in Sherritt Gordon’s Nickel Refinery

    By S. C. Lindsay, D. J. I. Evans

    With each year that passes hydrometallurgical processes are being more widely used to recover base metals from ores and concentrates. Generally these processes involve liquid-solid separation of metal

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Water-Gas as Fuel

    By W. A. Goodyear

    It is safe to assert that in cities generally, the fuel of the future for all domestic, as well as for most manufacturing and metallurgical purposes, will be gaseous fuel. The immense advantages which

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Notes on the Blast Furnace

    By J. M. Hartman

    ONE of the most important subjects to the blast-furnace engineer is a thorough knowledge of the conditions affecting the temperature in the different portions of the furnace. All efforts to decrease t

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Birmingham Paper - Blast-furnace Practice in Alabama (with Discussion)

    By H. E. Mussey

    When the American Institute of Mining Engineers visited the Birmingham district in May, 1888, the four Ensley furnaces (Fig. 1) then completed were referred to as monumental.' Their dim

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Principles Of Comminution-Size And Surface Distribution

    By A. M. Gaudin, R. T. Hukki

    PREVIOUS work on the principles of comminution has shown: (I) that the surface produced is proportional to work input (Rittinger law, 1a-3); (2) that there is regularity to the weight distribution of

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Papers - Description of Mills - Developments in the Concentrating of Minnesota Iron Ores (Mining Technology, Nov. 1941)

    By T. B. Counselman

    The importance of concentration of iron ores too low in grade to be smelted direct is shown by Table I, showing 1940 ship- ments from the Lake Superior district. Canadian ores are omitted. O

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    A Combined Pore Diffusion And Chalcopyrite Dissolution Kinetics Model For In Situ Leaching Of A Fragmented Copper Porphyry

    By Robert W. Bartlett

    A computer model for predicting the rate of oxidative leaching of copper from fragmented low grade sulfide ores is presented. The model involves the kinetics of the dissolution of chalcopyrite grains

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    Molybdenum

    By R. S. Archer

    THE name molybdena was employed by Pliny to denote various substances resembling lead. Later this name was applied to galena-the naturally occurring sulfide of lead-or substances of similar appearance

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Canal Zone Paper - Pyritic Smelting in Leadville

    By Charles H. Doolittle, Royal P. Jarvis

    The following notes are contributed, not with the idea of offering a complete history of the development of this very important process as applied to the Leadville district, but with the hope that the

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Particle Size Analysis – A Review

    By R. Venkateswar, G. C. Sresty

    Size measurement is important in characterization of fine particles. Commonly employed size measurement techniques such as sieving, microscopy, and sedimentation are discussed in this paper. Operating

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    A New Method of Top Slicing at Kipushi, Katanga, Belgian Congo

    By G. Van Esbroeck

    THE copper mines of the Katanga region in the Belgian Congo lie along the same mineralized belt as those of Northern Rhodesia. There are two distinct types of deposits in that belt, the dolomitic and

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Chino

    REJUVENATED is an apt word to apply to Chino, Kennecott's big open-pit mine at Santa Rita, New Mexico. Back in 1923 Chino was merged with Ray by an exchange of shares, and in 1926 the Ray-Chino c

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Atmospheric Oxidation or Weathering of Coal

    By James P. Kimball

    BY the term weathering of coal is meant the process of deterioration to which under various circumstances it may be exposed at ordinary temperatures, both from outward agencies on the one hand, and on

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Blast-furnace Flue Dust

    By R. W. H. Atcherson

    BLAST-FURNACE flue dust is one of the most troublesome operating factors in the iron and steel industry. It is usually involved in all the unpleasant phases of blast-furnace operations. It adds to our

    Jan 2, 1920

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - Aluminum-Magnesium Equilibrium Diagram

    By J. B. Clark, F. N. Rhines

    THE A1-Mg phase diagram in the composition range from 30 to 60 pct Mg remains uncertain. Four intermetallic compounds are reported in this composition range. All of the published diagrams are in agree

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Producing-Equipment, Methods and Materials - An Analytical Concept of the Static and Dynamic Parameter of Intermittent Gas Lift (missing pages)

    By R. C. Davis, R. F. Berry, G. W. White, B. T. O’Connell, L. A. Stacha

    P,, and v, may now be solved for by trial and error between Eqs. 2 and 3, by assuming time approaching zero and equating PI, to P12. Observe that the pressure under the slug, P12 of Eq. 3, does not

  • AIME
    Notes On The Blast Furnace

    By J. M. Hartman

    ONE of the most important subjects to the blast-furnace engineer is a thorough knowledge of the conditions affecting the temperature in the different portions of the furnace. All efforts to decrease t

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Clay Mineralogy Of Insoluble Residues In Marine Evaporites

    By Marc W. Bodine

    Insoluble residues from three sequences of Paleozoic marine evaporates (Retsof salt bed in western New York, Salado Formation in southeastern New Mexico, and Paradox Member of the Hermosa Formation in

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    Environmental Conditions Of Deposition Of Coal

    By David White

    THE environmental conditions under which coals are deposited are revealed by the stratigraphy of the coal basins and coal beds and by the details of the structure and the physical constitution of the

    Jan 1, 1925