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  • AIME
    Sound Ingots

    By R. Hadfield

    Last year this institute was good enough to accept some remarks by the writer regarding sound steel, entitle Plant for Hadfield Method of Producing Sound Steel Ingots…

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    South America as a Source of Strategic Minerals

    By Charles Will Wright

    Brief descriptions of the occurrence of the various deposits of strategic minerals then known in South America are published in "The Mineral Deposits of South America," by B. L. Miller and J. T. Singe

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Engineering Problems in Atomic Energy for Industrial Application

    By J. A. Hutcheson

    NO one questions that it is technically possible to achieve the controlled release of atomic energy in a form that can be converted into heat or electricity. However, before this is actually an accomp

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Coal - Advanced Work on the Determination of Coke Stability from Coal Hardgrove Grindability Index, Bulk Density, Pulverization Level and Volatile Matter

    By J. W. Leonard

    This expanded and more detailed supplement to earlier published work1 is offered as a means to demonstrate the high empirical correlation which exists between the readily measured coal bench scale tes

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Inter-American Engineering Relations

    By Charles A. Thomson

    RECENTLY a prominent Brazilian' doctor wrote to an American friend: "I feel that cultural relations between the American and Brazilian people could be promoted in a very speedy and effective way

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Mechanization and Incentives, Cut Costs at Chief Mine

    By John G. Hall

    The unstable metal market during 1949, with resulting lower metal prices, has focused every mine operator's attention on the problem of reducing operating costs. Improvement in mining, methods, u

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Self-diffusion in Sintering of Metallic Particles

    By G. C. Kuczynski

    Two particles in mutual contact form a system which is not in thermo-dynamical equilibrium, because its total surface free energy is not a minimum. If such a system is left for a certain period of tim

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Since The Turn Of The Century

    THE. extraordinary volume of work done in this period, and the multiplicity of subject matter, make a year-by-year historical account undesirable, if the account is not to be an assembly of unrelated

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Mining and Manufacturing

    By M. S. NORTH

    IT may be a far cry from the days of the old horse whim, and it is relatively a long way back to hand production in factories. Modern machinery has made possible deep shaft-sinking, newer methods have

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Zirconium And Hafnium Minerals (0c64b2b3-f825-4f1f-8c1c-751c8a2154da)

    By H. Conrad Meyer

    The wizardry of nucleonics has added new and greater dimensions to the almost inseparable "twins"-zirconium and hafnium. So close is their relationship that neither element is found free of the other

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Modern Strip Mining of Coal Brings Changes in Preparation Practice

    By C. McCulloch

    OPEN-PIT mining of coal is relatively a recent innovation; men still active in the industry can trace its development. Re- viewing the growth of operations from the original horse-drawn scrapers, thro

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - The Manufacture of Soda by the Ammonia Process

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    The serious objections to the Leblanc soda process may be enumerated as follows: 1st. The total loss of sulphur employed, equal to about one-third of soda produced. Various processes have been propose

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    The Manufacture of Soda by the Ammonia Process

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    THE serious objections to the Leblanc soda process may be enumerated as follows : 1st. The total loss of sulphur employed, equal to about one-third of soda produced. Various processes have been propos

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Typical Low Grade Iron Formations Of Michigan

    By Frank J. Tolonen, Nicholas H. Manderfield, Paul Jasberg

    EARLY in the study of the low grade iron formations of Michigan, wide variations in their structure and texture became evident. Because of these variations no simple method of concentration is possibl

    Jan 11, 1957

  • AIME
    Aluminum Production

    By Philip D. Wilson

    AS thin most important and vital component of an airplane aluminum hay rapidly become the heart and tome- of the war program. Its production ham increased amt will continue to increase, in comparison

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Colorado Meeting

    Preliminary plans of this meeting, together with a most interesting series of papers that have been received or promised, were published in the May Bulletin. The plans are being carried out enthusiast

    Jan 6, 1918

  • AIME
    John R. Suman - A.I.M.E. President for 1941

    By AIME AIME

    A CERTAIN area in the State of Indiana seems to be a breeding place for presidents and near president about eighteen miles southeast of Elwood is the little village of Daleville, and there, on April 9

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel

    By Edgar C. Bain

    A NUMBER probably a sizable group of person with a dominant interest in metals maintain contact with the developments in ferrous metallurgy by reading week by week, as time permits, some four or five

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Muscle Shoals Possibilities

    By PHILIP N. MOORE

    THE development of the power of the Tennessee River at Muscle Shoals has become a matter of political interest as well as engineering possibility. The controversy over it has been so active that the f

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Of Mr. Emmons’s Paper on A Concise Method of Showing Ore-Reserves (see p. 322)

    E. W. King, Bozeman, Mont.: The form of measuring up ore in sight looks very plausible, as illustrated in the paper of Mr. Emmons, but from my experience of many years of mining in Montana and Nevada,

    Jan 1, 1913