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  • AIME
    Mining-Man's First Useful Art

    By B. F. Tillson

    Mining may be defined as a general term for the working of valuable deposits of minerals, either organic or inorganic in origin, for their removal from the crust of the earth. Besides subsurface excav

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Secondary Copper and Brass

    By J. W. Furness

    THE utilization and collection of waste materials have gone on for centuries, and have become a habit of the human race. The degree to which the salvaging of waste plays a part in a nation's indu

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Western Operations of U. S. Smelting-Scope and Organization

    By Fred S. Mulock

    THE principal operating and producing properties covered by the Western Operations of the United States Smelting Refining and Mining Company are the U. S. and Lark mine in the Bingham district of Utah

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Economic Effects of Recent Oil Discoveries in Illinois

    By Joseph E. Pogue

    THE period of new oil discoveries in Illinois began in February 1937, when The Pure Oil Co. found the Clay City field the forerunner of a number of limestone pools. The importance of the area was emph

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Aluminum ? How to Utilize Surplus Capacity Is Postwar Problem

    By R. L. Sebastian

    ALUMINUM'S war history is the record of a successful race to expand facilities fast enough to meet the multiple increases in military requirements, principally for aircraft. From the beginning of

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Comparison of Methods for the Determination of Iron and Phosphorus in -Steel

    By Messrs. von Jonstorff

    Continued Discussion of the Paper of Messrs. von Jonstorff, Blair, Dillner and Stead, presented at the New York Meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, October, 1904.* (Bethlehem Meeting, February,

    Mar 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Use of Hydrogen Sulfide to Recover Copper from Acidic Leach Solutions

    By Clark A. Sumner, D. Arthur Burnham

    A process for recovery of greater than 99% of the copper contained in acid leach solutions by sulfide precipitation using hydrogen sulfide as a hydrometallurgical reagent has been developed. The proce

    Jan 1, 1974

  • AIME
    Do Our Mineral Industries Schools Give an Engineering Training?

    By William R. Chedsey

    IN the last two years the E.C.P.D. committees having to do with the inspection of engineering schools for possible accrediting have been concerned with the engineering content of some of the mineral i

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    An Oil Lesson from Mexico

    By Ralph Arnold

    LESS than eight months ago at the annual meeting of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, attention was called to the demoralizing effect of the abnormal oil production of Mexi

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Engineers? Dinner to John Fritz Delegation to Europe

    By AIME AIME

    NEARLY two hundred 'engineers attended the dinner given at the Hotel Pennsylvania on Monday-evening, Oct. 10, to the delegation from the American l3nginiering Societies to Great Britain and Franc

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Some Aspects of the Iron Ore Situation

    By F. B. Richards

    THERE has been much interest recently in the iron ore supply of the Lake Superior district. It may be of interest to this meeting to give some thought to this situation, dealing more particularly with

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Glass Mine-Models.

    By EDBIUND U. NORTH

    IN making a glass model of mine-workings, each mine will present some little individualities, to meet which will call for the exercise of special ingenuity. Having made several models, I offer the fol

    Jan 1, 1910

  • AIME
    The Slagging Gas Producer.

    By William Blauvelt

    THE type of gas producer in which the ashes are fluxed and run off as slag was among the very earliest made. Ebelmen built the first one in 1840 at Audincourt, France, only a year after the installati

    Jan 12, 1913

  • AIME
    The Manufacture of Coke in Northern China

    By YANG TSANQ WOO

    THE method of making coke that has been adopted at the Kaiping and other collieries in northern China resembles, to some extent, the familiar bee-hive oven process of the United States, except that a

    Nov 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Production - Foreign - Petroleum Development in Bolivia and Chile in 1930

    By Gilbert P. Moore

    Petroleum operations in Bolivia are still limited to those of the subsidiaries of the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey. Development work is being carried on at Sanandita and at Bermejo and testing opera

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Technology And Uses Of Monazite Sand

    By R. Philip Hammond

    MONAZITE has had a Cinderella-like history. Although nearly go per cent pure rare-earth compound (rare-earth phosphate) it was sought at first not for the rare earths but for the sake of a minor const

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Radioactive Atmospherical Method of Measurement for Geophysical Prospecting

    By Andrew Corry

    GEOPHYSICAL investigations based on radioactivity have been applied to the earth's crust for the purpose of discovering bodies rich in radioactive substances, or for the location of solutions wit

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - The Use of Spiral Classifiers as Ball Mill Feeders

    By T. C. King

    AT the new Graham-Central Mill of Eagle-Picher, near Galena, Ill., material is simultaneously dewatered and introduced into the ball-mill scoop boxes by the use of variable-speed, 24-in. spiral classi

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Production - Foreign - Production in Arabia and Bahrein in 1944 with Summary of Operations Since 1940

    By James Terry Duce

    The gross production on the Island of Sahreirl during 1944 was approximately 6,700,000 U. S. bbl. No additional wells were drilled in the field during the year, but a number that were plugged off duri

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Mine Labor and Accidents

    THE relation of labor to the accident rate in mines is admirably epitomized by Thomas T. Read in his paper presented at the St. Louis meeting, in the sentence "Reliance for accident prevention must be

    Jan 2, 1918