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  • AIME
    Mining - Block Caving Practice at the Jeffrey Mine

    By H. H. Waller, D. L. Monroe, D. P. R. Smyth

    ORIGINALLY slusher drift development was conventional, advancing the drift full 10x13-ft size at 6 ft per round. This proved dangerous and costly because the weak fractured rock of the orebody cannot

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Metal Mining

    By Lucien Eaton

    THE changes that have occurred in metal mining in the past 75 years include almost everything that we know about modern mining. It is true that in odd corners of the world mining is still carried on a

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Gas Sorption In Flotation

    By A. S. Adams

    A GLANCE at the list of papers1 that have been published since 1920 on the general subject of flotation suggests the variety of ideas that exist regarding the underlying cause of the phenomenon.'

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Mechanism of Plastic Flow in Titanium: Manifestations and Dynamics of Glide (Discussion page 1316)

    By F. D. Rosi

    The slip and twinning behavior in extended titanium crystals were studied in some detail. The formation and appearance of coarse kink bands are discussed. Their crystallographic geometry was determine

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Symposium On Cyclones – Cyclone Practice In Arizona

    By Russell Salter, Edwin J. King

    SINCE 1950, when perhaps two or three cyclones were being tested in Arizona, the number in use has grown to about 100. Most of these have come into operation within the last two or three years, and ac

    Jan 8, 1957

  • AIME
    History and Financing of the Morenci Development

    By Dodge, C. E.

    ONE of the first mining areas to be developed in Arizona was that in the district centering about Clifton and Morenci. Traces of metals were first noticed by Henry Clifton on an expedition in 1864. De

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    British Columbia Paper - The Origin of Clinton Red Fossil-Ore in Lookout Mountain, Alabama

    By William M. Bowron

    Thirty years ago, when I stood on the cliff of red fossil iron-ore, on Red mountain, Jefferson county, Ala., I asked what were the geological relations of this remarkable deposit. In reply I was told

    Jan 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Geology Of The Manganese Ore Deposits Of The Gold Coast, Africa

    By Albert Sir Kitson

    THE manganese ore deposits of the Gold Coast, British West Africa, occur in very ancient rocks, of both sedimentary and metamorphic types. In. certain respects they strongly resemble those of India an

    Jan 5, 1927

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Water-cooled Equipment for Open-hearth Furnaces (with Discussion)

    By W. C. Coffin

    The refractory linings of open-hearth steel furnaces above the bath line are subject to severe wear not only from the heat caused by the combustion of the fuel and the reactions of the bath, but also

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Papers - Age-hardening - Copper-beryllium "Bronzes." (With Discussion)

    By J. Kent Smith

    The object of this investigation was to ascertain the effect of varying percentages of beryllium upon pure copper and the properties of the resultant alloys in their softest condition, the effect of h

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Papers - Constitution and Thermal Treatment - Recrystallization of Silicon Ferrite in Terms of Rate of Nucleation and Rate of Growth (T.P. 1438, with discussion)

    By J. K. Stanley, R. F. Meel

    The recrystallization of cold-worked metals is studied ordinarily by determining the temperatures required for complete recrystallization to occur within a given arbitrary time period, usually within

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Papers - Constitution and Thermal Treatment - Recrystallization of Silicon Ferrite in Terms of Rate of Nucleation and Rate of Growth (T.P. 1438, with discussion)

    By R. F. Meel, J. K. Stanley

    The recrystallization of cold-worked metals is studied ordinarily by determining the temperatures required for complete recrystallization to occur within a given arbitrary time period, usually within

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Detroit Paper - Quantitative Spectrum Analysis (with Discussion)

    By F. Twyman, D. M. Smith

    Those chemists (they are still greatly in the minority) who use the spectroscope, use it very often, and find it almost indispensable. As a means of detecting minute quantities of the metals it is unr

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Mica Process Development

    By James S. Browning

    For the past several years, USBM has conducted laboratory and continuous process development work on the weathered mica pegmatites ores of Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina to determine the feasibi

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Cooperative Study of Methods for the Determination of Oxygen in Steel

    By J. G. Thompson

    THE methods employed for the determination of oxides and oxygen in ferrous materials may be roughly classed in two groups, "wet" methods and "hot" methods, the first group including the iodine, electr

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Manganiferous Iron Ores of the Cuyuna District, Minnesota

    By E. C. Harder

    IN view of the gradually decreasing known reserves of high-grade manganese ore and the rapidly increasing consumption of iron-manganese alloys in the steel industry, it is well to turn our attention t

    Jan 9, 1917

  • AIME
    Coal - Cyclone Operating Factors and Capacities on Coal and Refuse Slurries

    By D. A. Dahlstrom

    Although the liquid-solid cyclone is a relatively recent innovation in the field of coal preparation, various authors have already indicated three distinct applications to operations encountered in th

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Choosing a Composition for Low-alloy High-strength Steel

    By S. Epstein

    THE new low-alloy high-strength steels are obviously here to stay. With 75 per cent higher yield strength and 50 per cent higher tensile strength than plain carbon structural steel, they permit 20 to

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Some Observations Regarding Refractories for Iron Blast Furnaces

    By Roy Lindgren

    Since the year 1643, when the first blast furnace in America for treating iron ore was built at Saugus, Mass., out of mica schist quarried in the neighboring district, the procurement of a suitable re

    Jan 1, 1936