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  • AIME
    Its Everyones Business

    APRIL 10-Officially, spring comes to the Great Lakes on March 21 as it does elsewhere in the country but in the Superior district continued snow and freezing until late in March have caused citizens i

    Jan 5, 1950

  • AIME
    Breaking Half a Million Tons of Ore in One Blast with 58 Tons of Powder

    By F. S. McNicholas, R. L. Healy

    NOTEWORTHY because of the amount of explosives used, the tonnage broken, and the wide range involved both vertically and laterally, was a large underground blast fired last November at the Hidden Cree

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Coal - Fluorine in Western Coals

    By Harold R. Bradford

    EXPANSION initiated during and after the war has placed industrial plants in new areas and increased reduction and manufacturing facilities in communities already established. With added expansion int

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Microstructure Of Iron Deposited By Electric Arc Welding

    By George Comstock

    THESE notes should be considered as a further discussion of Mr. S. W. Miller's paper on "Some Structures in Steel Fusion Welds."1 In that paper and the resulting discussion; several conflicting o

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    The Forward Move in Mining Technology

    By James J. Scott, John J. Reed

    In a year fraught with difficulties, especially to small operators, the more stable mining organizations have shown a dynamic readiness to plunge ahead in the development of new mines, new and ingenio

    Jan 2, 1963

  • AIME
    Preparation of High-specification Sand at the Grand Coulee Dam

    By Anthony Anable

    THE definite trend to stricter specifications with respect to hydraulic concrete has become increasingly manifest in the last six years or so; but it remained for the vast reclamation projects of the

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - The Action of Dilute Acids on Certain Varieties of Fused Suiphide of Iron

    By Edward Hart

    Having occasion several years since to make ferrous sulphide, I attempted to do so by fusing a mixture of coal-brasses (FeS2) and dried ferrous sulphate. A very nice-looking sulphide was obtained; but

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Similkameen Mining Company, Limited - Princeton, British Columbia

    The Similkameen mine is located about 100 miles east of Vancouver, British Columbia, and ten miles west of Princeton, where the mine personnel live. Princeton was the first town in the British Columbi

    Jan 1, 1978

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Magnesite: Its Geology, Products and Their Uses (with Discussion)

    By C. D. Dolman

    Since the outbreak of the war we have discovered in the united States minerals of which there was no general knowledge, and which compared very favorably with anything that could be found in any forei

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - Data for One of the Martensitic Transformations in an 11 Pct Mo-Ti Alloy

    By S. Weinig, E. S. Machlin

    THE mechanism of the martensitic transformation has been the subject of a remarkable number of papers in recent years.' Because the task of evaluating all the available theories is a formidable o

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Iodine

    By John Jan

    Iodine is a soft, lustrous, grayish-black non- metallic element with a density of 4.9. It is the least active of the four members of the halogen family. The other members are, in order of increasing a

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Brown Iron Ore Deposits of the Greenville District of Alabama

    By WALTER B. JONES

    PIG iron was first produced in Alabama in 1818 from limonite or brown ore and since then much of this ore has come from the so-called mineral district of northern Alabama, especially along the Cretace

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Madison River Plant No. 2

    "Located in Madison River Canyon, about 14 miles by road from Norris, Mont. Built in 1907 by Madison River Power Co.DAM: Rock filled wooden crib structure, 183 ft. long, 34 ft. high or 44 ft. to top o

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Field-Investigations Of Structural Materials By The U. S. Geological Survey.

    By Ernest F. Burchard

    (Pittsburg Meeting, March, 1910.) IN connection with the work of testing structural materials for the use of the U. S. Government at the laboratories of the technologic branch of the U. S. Geological

    Jun 1, 1910

  • AIME
    Nickel-Bearing Alloys in the Production and Refining of Petroleum

    By Byron B. Morton

    NICKEL-BEARING alloys are associated with petroleum in the fields of exploration, production, and refining. In the first- named field the geologist of today makes use of such instruments as the seismo

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Coal - Synthetic Liquid Fuels from Coal - Discussion

    By J. D. Doherty

    A. R. POWELL*—Mr. Doherty has outlined in a most thorough manner valid arguments for the development of an industry in this country making syn. thetic liquid fuels from coal. No thoughtful person will

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Young's Modulus and Its Temperature Dependence in 36 to 52 Pct Nickel-Iron Alloys

    By W. C. Elli, M. E. Fine

    YOUNG'S modulus of elasticity in metals ordinarily decreases with rising temperature. The range of the thermoelastic coefficient at room tem- 1/E dE/dT perature (temperature coefficient

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Petroleum as an Instrument For Peace

    By W. B. Heroy

    ONLY through the mineral fuels can large amounts of energy be transported to great dlstances and stored for long periods for future use. Coal has the advantages over oil of greater safety of handling

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Magnesium - Process Improvements at the Henderson Plant of Basic Magnesium, Incorporated

    By J. R. Coulter, F. O. Case, H. G. Satterthwaite, B. Harden

    During the two years that the Henderson plant has been in operation, a number of technical improvements have been made by the staff of Basic Magnesium, Inc., the effects of which were realized subsequ

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Comparison of Creep-Rupture Properties of Widmanstätten and Equiaxed Structures of Ti-7AI-3Mo Alloy

    By W. F. Carew, F. A. Crossley

    The stress for rupture in 500 hr at 1000° F has been reported to be about 13,000 psi higher for Widmanstitten than for equiaxed microstructures for the Ti-7A1-3Mo alloy.1,2 Also, limited data indicate

    Jan 1, 1959