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  • AIME
    On Rail Patterns

    By A. L. Holley

    THERE are regularly manufactured in the eleven Bessemer steel rail mills of the United States, 119 patterns* of steel rails, of 27 different weights per yard. This list does not include patterns which

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
  • AIME
    United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Company Midvale Plant (3e557b9f-ca99-4e74-bddc-76af002295d0)

    "The Midvale. Plant of the United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Company, situated twelve miles south of Salt Lake City, consists of mills for concentrating lead-zinc ores and a custom lead smel

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Long-Hole Mining Methods - Changing Mining Methods at the Holden Mine

    By John J. Curzon

    The existence of mineralized ground in the area near Lake Chelan has been known since 1887, when Major A. B. Rogers, a locating engineer for the Great Northern Railway, came up Lake Chelan to Railroad

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Production - Texas - Oil and Gas Development in North Central Texas in 1943

    By V. C. Perini

    The North Central Texas district as herein defined includes the counties of Brown, Callahan, Coleman, Comanche, Coryell, Eastland, Erath, Fisher, Hamilton, Haskell, Hood, Jones, Lampasas, Mills, Nolan

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Papers - Solubility of Oxygen in High-purity Copper (T.P. 1280, with discussion)

    By E. N. Skinner, Arthur Philliops

    During the course of an experimental program concerned with the hydrogen embrittlement of copper containing oxygen in concentrations within the solubility limits it became necessary to make a critical

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Recent Developments in the Manufacture of Lightweight Aggregates

    By John E. Conley, John A. Ruppert

    LIGHTWEIGHT aggregates have been in use for many years in the United States but are now receiving more and more attention by manufacturers and users of concrete shapes. These shapes comprise building

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Production - Texas - Oil and Gas Development in North Central Texas in 1943

    By V. C. Perini

    The North Central Texas district as herein defined includes the counties of Brown, Callahan, Coleman, Comanche, Coryell, Eastland, Erath, Fisher, Hamilton, Haskell, Hood, Jones, Lampasas, Mills, Nolan

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Recent Developments in the Manufacture of Lightweight Aggregates

    By John A. Ruppert, John E. Conley

    LIGHTWEIGHT aggregates have been in use for many years in the United States but are now receiving more and more attention by manufacturers and users of concrete shapes. These shapes comprise building

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Oxidation of Iron in Carbon Dioxide-Carbon Monoxide Atmospheres

    By W. W. Smeltzer

    The linear formation rates of wustite films have been determined over the temperature range 590° to 1030°C using a vacuum microbalance technique. These rates are dependent directly on the partial pre

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Papers - Solubility of Oxygen in High-purity Copper (T.P. 1280, with discussion)

    By E. N. Skinner, Arthur Philliops

    During the course of an experimental program concerned with the hydrogen embrittlement of copper containing oxygen in concentrations within the solubility limits it became necessary to make a critical

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    The History and Legal Phases of the Smoke Problem

    By Ligon Johnson

    ONLY the acute phase of the smelter fume problem is new. The problem itself is older than the Christian era. While both lead and copper were mined and crudely smelted ; on: 3,000 years ago, it was no

    Jan 5, 1917

  • AIME
    Non-Ferrous Secondary Metals Recovered In The United States

    By J. P. Dunlop

    THE fact is-notable though probably little known that the United States is the only nation obtaining and distributing through its Government bureaus any data pertaining to waste metals and drosses. So

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    A Background For The Application Of Geomagnetics To Exploration

    By Noel Stearn

    WHEN the Age of Machinery was suddenly thrust upon civilization about the beginning of the 19th century, an unprecedented demand for mineral resources sprang up. This demand brought about the rapid de

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    The Rise and Decadence of Goldfield

    By Percy Barbour

    The town of Goldfield, Nevada, with the exception of six stone buildings, was burned to the ground to-day. One man is dead from causes attributed to the fire. A woman is missing and is believed to hav

    Jan 8, 1923

  • AIME
    Natural Gas Technology - Compressibility Factors for Lean Natural Gas-Carbon Dioxide Mixtures at High Pressure

    By J. M. Campbell, T. S. Buxton

    The most widely used methods of predicting the volumetric properties of gas are based on the principle of corresponding states, which asserts that the compressibility factor is a universal function of

  • AIME
    Wise or Unwise?

    By P. D. Merica

    MY remarks are addressed to the question whether a program of international mineral control can effectively serve as a means of maintaining world peace in the kind of world envisaged by the Atlantic C

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Lead and Silver Smelting in Chicago

    By J. L. Jernegan

    In this paper I propose to give a short and, I must confess, a rather incomplete description, as regards many details, of the process used in Chicago, Ill., for smelting the argentiferous ores of the

  • AIME
    The Application Of The Ternary Diagram To Arkansas Bauxite

    By J. R. Thoenen, M. C. Malamphy, G. K. Dale

    THE beginning of the war and the events leading up to it precipitated a near crisis in the aluminum industry. Demands for the metal reached proportions far beyond the prewar production capacities and,

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Lightweight Aggregates

    By T. A. Klinefelter

    Lightweight concrete aggregates are materials weighing less than the usual aggregates of sand, gravel, and crushed rock. Concretes made with sand and gravel or crushed rock weigh 145 to 150 lb per cu

    Jan 1, 1960