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  • AIME
    Lead and Its Uses in the Mineral Industries

    By Felix Edgar Wormser

    JUST as the ancients used the products of their crude mining endeavors to fashion tools with which to make digging easier, so today mining enterprises are dependent upon the very metals they mine for

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    A Homemade Portable Assay Furnace

    By James P. Sloss

    A PERMANENT assay office is commonly established as part of the general plant equipment of operating gold and silver properties, but during the development stage of a mine, the cost of such an office

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Gold and Silver Milling and Cyaniding - Increasing Gold Recovery from Noranda's Milling Ore

    By G. C. McLachlan

    Two papers dealing with Noranda's milling operations have already been presented. The first1 of these covered the initial metallurgical problems connected with the treatment of the ore, while the

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    The Behavior Of Copper-Matte And Copper-Nickel Matte In The Bessemer Converter.

    By David H. Browne

    (Pittsburg Meeting, March, 1910.) NICKEL has always been a fruitful mother of problems. Previous to the year 1906 nickel was regarded as an element replacing iron in copper-mattes, and it was belie

    Apr 1, 1910

  • AIME
    Mineral Economics - U. S. Share of World Metal Output Declines in Last Decade

    By Arthur Notmon

    WORLD production of the three major nonferrous metals, copper, lead, and zinc, in 1939 will aggregate about 6,050;000 tons, compared with the all-time peak of 6,237,944 tons in 1937, and the previous

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    The Stock Exchange and Its Relation to the Mining Industry

    By FRABK HERVEY PETTINGELL

    THE stock exchange and its functions is about as well understood by the average individual as the fourth dimension. What is a stock exchange? Divested of the rules and regulations by which it is gover

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Rare Metals Becoming More Common

    By Paul M. Tyler, Colin G. Fink

    THE field of rare metals is so broad that progress can be reported upon many important fronts. Not satisfied with the 92 elements that Mendeleeff and his followers have accepted as legitimate, scient

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Metals in Modern Society - Fundamental Research on Metals and Alloys a Must

    By Cyril Stanley Smith

    ARCHEOLOGISTS, by use of the terms Bronze Age and Iron Age, indicate that metals have in the past determined the character of civilization. The relatively simple discovery by a primitive metallurgist

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Arizona's Copper Province And The Texas Lineament

    By Jacques B. Wertz

    Both the San Andreas fault complex and the Murray fracture zone are apparently found to be contemporaneous with the Laramide mineralization period. Their compounding effects certainly have disturbed t

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Speeding Up Steel Refining

    By B. A. Rogers

    IN addition to the usual methods of manufacturing steel, a number of special processes have been the subject of considerable experimentation-and use in manufacturing practice. A number of these method

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Cleaning- Bituminous Coal

    By J. R. Campbell

    THE need for standardizing methods of arriving at definite conclusions regarding the cleanability of a given coal, and for measuring the performance of coal-cleaning equipment, is constantly increasin

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Mining and Milling Utah Rock Asphalt

    By R. C. FLEMING

    MINING rock asphalt for use as a paving material is an industry which has grown with the spread of the good roads movement. "Mineral Industry During 1930" reports asphaltic pavements constructed, incl

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Oil Production in the Upper Texas Gulf Coast during 1945

    By P. B. Leavenworth

    Development in the Upper Texas Gulf Coast during 1945 resulted in the discovery of 23 new fields; one Miocene, eight Frio, three Cockfield-Yegua and eleven along the Wilcox trend. The Wilcox trend app

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Present Condition of the Mining Industry

    By H. Foster Bain

    THERE has never been a great civilized nation which did not have a mining industry; civilization cannot flourish without metal mining. Without tools we can have none of the 'industries that are t

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Mining Geology in 1929

    By R. J. Colony

    MINING geology does not lend itself - very readily to a review embracing "improvements in methods," as perhaps do shop practices or laboratory procedures. The "methods" used in mining geology are si

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Notes on the Fatigue of Non-ferrous Metals

    By H. F. Moore

    DURING the last six years, there have been many extensive investigations of the fatigue of metals. The major work of 'these investigations has been the determination of constants for fatigue stre

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    The Battle of the Metals

    By Percy W. Bidwell

    THE statisticians had defeated Germany months before she invaded Poland. With batteries of adding machines they had proved that she was suffering from serious deficiencies in critical food- stuffs and

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Commercial Movement of Silver

    By H. C., Simpson

    MANY metals by virtue of their place of occurrence as ore, and their uses are travelers! Iron and steel, for instance, is one of the greatest of travelers in the form of ships and the romance of iron

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    A Portable Assay-Outfit For Field-Work.

    By S. K. Bradford

    (Pittsburg Meeting, March, 1910.) FOR years past I have traveled in quest of promising mining-properties, over almost impassable mountain-trails to remote places in the mining-regions, usually, many

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Discussions - Of Mr. Woo's Paper on Silver-Mining and Smelting in Mongolia (see p. 755)

    MR. Woo's succinct description of the mining and smelting of silver-lead in Mongolia, with the roasting-and-reduction process and cupellation, has much interest as a picture of methods that not o

    Jan 1, 1903