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  • AIME
    Heavy Metal Patterns in Stream Waters, Stream Sediments, and Selected Aquatic Life, Northern New Lead Belt, Southeast Missouri (518b4dd9-0c6f-459c-ae51-f92bb334ec63)

    By Bhudeo N. Sinha, Paul Dean Proctor

    Heavy metal contents in stream waters, sediments, and selected aquatic algae were determined for the upper Meramec River basin, Missouri, of 3905 km2 (1508 sq mi) area and site of the proposed and con

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Heavy Metals In Stream Sediment Used as Exploration Guides

    By Harold Bloom, H. E. Hawkes

    Streams and rivers are the principal channels into which the weathering products of rocks and their contained ores are funneled. The inorganic load of a stream system is a crude sample of all the eart

    Nov 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Heavy Mineral Deposits Of The East Coast Of Australia

    By N. H. Fisher

    GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION THE most important known deposits in Australia of what are commonly referred to as the beach-sand minerals are along the most easterly part of the Australian coast, betwee

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Heavy-Media Separation Increases Brown Ore Reserves

    BROWN iron ore reserves of Franklin county are being proved economical by Heavy-Media separation at the Blackburn mine of the Shook & Fletcher Supply Co. about 120 miles north-west of Birmingham. The

    Jan 12, 1950

  • AIME
    Heavy-Media Separation Plant Of The Barton Mines Corporation

    By H. H. Vogel

    THIS paper describes the milling practice and operating results of the recently installed heavy-media separation plant of Barton Mines Corporation, the world's largest producer of garnet. This pi

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Hecla's Mayflower Mine Uses Hydraulic Sandfill In Stoping Operations

    By G. L. Wilhelm

    Prior to the construction of a 450 tpd concentrator at the Mayflower mine, owned by the New Park Mining Co. and operated by the Hecla Mining Co., the common mining methods were cut and fill, with wast

    Jan 5, 1968

  • AIME
    Height Of Gas Cap In Safety Lamp

    By C. M. Young

    THE safety lamp is the most common and convenient apparatus for detecting inflammable gases in mines, the presence of gas being shown by a blue flame, called the cap, if the wick has been lowered to s

    Jan 8, 1919

  • AIME
    Height of Gas Cap in Safety Lamp - Discussion

    E. B. WILSON, Scranton, Pa. (written 'discussion *).-Prof. Young's paper shows another application of electricity in solving problems in coal mining, and suggests that it may be possible to

    Jan 10, 1919

  • AIME
    Height of Gas Cap in Safety Lamp - Discussion (66a08f94-474c-48fd-9e5a-53c0f3fa7cd1)

    H. G. DAVIS, * Wilkes-Barre, Pa. (written discussion ? ).-The only practical method of testing mine air for gas, until recent years, was by the effect of the gas on the flame of the ordinary Davey Lam

    Jan 11, 1919

  • AIME
    Height of Gas Cap in Safety Lamp- Discussion (7ab99b87-b70d-4ca9-b950-01430fb6c9ba)

    JAMES ASHWORTH, Livingstone, Alberta, Can. (written discussion*).-About the year 1878, the writer commenced to experiment on safety lamps, the results of which will be found in the Transactions of the

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    Heinrich Oscar Hofman

    By Heinrich Oscar Hofman

    IN THE death of Professor Hofman who was born on Aug. 13, 1852 and died on April 28, 1924, the world has lost a great metallurgist and a great author of metallurgical literature. Measured in time his

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Held Outside Engineering Building for First Time, Annual Meeting Draws Record Crowd

    By AIME AIME

    MONDAY, Feb. 21, evokes memories of the Silver Corridor at the Waldorf to be recalled and reflected upon for time to come when thoughts drift to the Annual Meeting of 1944. Crowded though it was, on o

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Helicopters for Exploration?

    By M. A. Matzkin

    The Problem: There are no roads and mapping has been inadequate. There isn't a clearing large enough to accommodate a conventional airplane. Entry would consume months, yet the area must be inves

    Jan 9, 1953

  • AIME
    Helium and Helium Filled Airships

    By AIME AIME

    TRANSFER to the Bureau of Mines of the responsibility for conservation and production of helium, and announcement that a proposal has been made to the President for commercial operation of the Los Ang

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Henry C. Carlisle – An Interview by Mary Carlisle, July 1959

    Henry C. Carlisle: This is a husband-and-wife act, in which Mary Carlisle is going to listen, and break in as often as she feels like it. I am going to describe my career as a mining engineer. We

    Jan 10, 1963

  • AIME
    Henry DeWitt Smith – An Interview by Henry Carlisle

    Carlisle: This is August 1960 and I am sitting across the table from Henry DeWitt Smith. We both took the mining course at Yale the same year; and here we are, over fifty years later, at Nantucket Isl

    Jan 11, 1963

  • AIME
    Henry Ford as a Factor in Mining and Metallurgy

    By VERITAS

    THE most concentrated industry of major character in the United States is that of the Ford Motor CO., which is to say Henry Ford. Its sole function is to supply the public with a cheap motor car which

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Henry Frederick Hebley - Chairman, Coal Division, AIME

    By AIME

    PROBABLY no greater world traveler has ever been Chairman of one of the Institute's Divisions than Henry Frederick Hebley. To begin with, he was born almost as far away as possible-in Christchurc

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Henry Krumb - Director and Vice-president, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    PROBABLY no man has been of greater service to the Institute and has kept more in the background than Henry Krumb. A Vice-President continuously) for the last eleven years, apparently neither his pict

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Heralding the Nonmetallic Mineral Age

    By C. C. Whittier

    CIVILIZATION'S PROGRESS, which has multiplied man's comforts, conveniences, a n d happiness, is based upon the extensive employment of natural minerals and sources of energy. Mineral resourc

    Jan 1, 1933