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Health And Safety In Mines
By S. H. Ash
Mass production methods, although increasingly important for economic reasons, create new hazards, remove many hazards, and improve health and safety by reducing exposure and obtaining better supervis
Jan 1, 1950
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Papers - - Petroleum Economics - Domestic Consumption of Motor Fuel (With Discussion)
By Albert McIntosh
One of the most interesting as well as important factors connected with the petroleum industry is the consumption of motor fuel. A few years ago we always spoke of "gasoline," but when natural gasolin
Jan 1, 1935
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Australia-Recent Developments In Surface Mining
By W. A. Weimer
Australia, the land of the kangaroo, koala, and the platypus, is often referred to as "down under" by people of the Northern Hemisphere. It is a tropical land and has very little freezing and thawing;
Jan 1, 1969
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New York Paper - The Geographic Distribution of Mining Development in the United States (with Discussion)
By Edward W. Parker
At the Cleveland meeting of the Institute, October, 1912, I had occasion to call attention to the general though erroneous impression that the principal mining activities of the United States lie west
Jan 1, 1914
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Official Institute Reports For The Year 1921
Gentlemen:-I herewith present a report on some of the more important activities of the Institute for the year 1921. The present incumbent took. over the active management of the Secretary's offi
Jan 2, 1922
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New York Paper - Moisture as a Component of the Volatile Matter of Coal (with Discussion)
By W. T. Thom
In previous classifications of coal, it has been customary to regard moisture eliminated from coal samples between 20 and 100 C. as extraneous matter, rather than as a constituent part of the coal. It
Jan 1, 1925
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Papers - The Role of the Spectrograph and of Minor Elements in Die Castings
By Thomas A. Wright
No symposium on die-casting could be complete without consideration of the methods of formula and impurity control. No corisideration of control would be complete without discussion of that new tool o
Jan 1, 1935
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Institute of Metals Division - Decay of Lattice Defects Frozen into an Alloy by Quenching
By A. S. Nowick, A. E. Roswell
Anelastic measurements of atomic mobility in an Ag-Zn substitutional solid solution, make possible a study of the rate of decay of lattice defects frozen into the alloy by quenching. A WIDE varie
Jan 1, 1954
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Papers - The Role of the Spectrograph and of Minor Elements in Die Castings
By Thomas A. Wright
No symposium on die-casting could be complete without consideration of the methods of formula and impurity control. No corisideration of control would be complete without discussion of that new tool o
Jan 1, 1935
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Papers - Nonmetallic Minerals - Application of the Wire Saw in Marble Quarrying (With Discussion)
By W. M. Weigel
The first successful use of the wire saw in slate quarrying in the United States was late in 1926, at the quarry of the Colonial Slate Co. near Wind Gap, Pa. This installation was sponsored and superv
Jan 1, 1931
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Papers - - Petroleum Economics - An Aspect of the Arbitrary Restraint of Production (With Discussion)
By J. D. Gill
Restriction programs in important raw-materials industries in foreign countries have been abandoned after lengthy trials. Presumably, failure has been a logical consequence of the attainment of object
Jan 1, 1934
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On the Self-Fluxing Properties of Chateaugay Magnetite, From Clinton County, N. Y. and its Treatment in the Blast Furnace
By James P. Kimball
THE object of the present memoir is to put on record some practical experiments by the writer in smelting a silicious native magnetite with no other flux than the silicates of its own gangue: This wor
Jan 1, 1881
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New York Paper - The Coking, in Beehive Ovens, of the Coals of the New River District, West Virginia
By Charles Catlett
Having had charge during the past year of the operations of the New River Coke Company, the second largest, if not the largest, coke-producer in this district, my attention was called particularly to
Jan 1, 1900
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Lake Superior Paper - On the Self-fluxing Properties of Chateaugay Magnetite, from Clinton County, N. Y., and its Treatment in the Blast Furnace
By James P. Kimball
The object of the present memoir is to pot on record some practical experiments by the writer in smelting a silicions native magnetite with no other flux than the silicates of its own gangue.' Th
Jan 1, 1881
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Improvements in the Metallurgy of Quicksilver
By L. H. Dushak
DURING the war period of quicksilver activity there were a number of departures from what may be termed the classical quicksilver metallurgy. Attempts were made to beneficiate low-grade ores by gravit
Jan 1, 1930
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Atlantic City Paper - The Mobility of Molecules of Cast-Iron
By A. E. Outerbridge
I had the honor to present to the American Institute of Mining Engineers at the Pittsburg meeting, February, 1896, a paper having the foregoing title, in which I said : " It has generally been accepte
Jan 1, 1905
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Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile Liquid-oxygen Blasting at Chuquicamata, Chile
By H. C. Schultz
CERTAIN local conditions were known to govern in large measure the successful adaptation of liquid-oxygen explosives to the large-scale blasting at Chuquicamata. The wide variation in hardness of the
Jan 1, 1928
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Chicago Paper - The Genesis of Certain Auriferous Lodes (Discussion, 993)
By John R. Don
This paper, under the title of "The Genesis of Auriferous Lodes from a Chemical Point of View, Illustrated by Analyses of Samples Taken from the Chief Auriferous Area of New Zealand, Victoria and Quee
Jan 1, 1898
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Geologic Occurrence and Evaluation of Bentonite Deposits
By T. E. Wayland
The general geology and mineralogy of bentonite, including pertinent technological details of clay minerals in the montmorillonite group, are summarized. Worldwide occurrences of bentonite deposits ar
Jan 1, 1972
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Mineral Education and the Society of Mining Engineers
By T. R. McMillan, R. D. English
An engineer's education is a lifetime pursuit, a fact which the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME recognizes through its Education Board. Created in 1977 and comprised of six standing committee
Jan 9, 1979