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Tribulations of a Small-Mine Operator ? Red Tape Worms Make Operation Difficult ? Efficient Managing Offsets Rising Costs
By H. L. Hazen
THIS is the story of the recent operations of the Standard Cyaniding Co., which owns the Standard mine, a low-grade gold property in sight of Highway 40 about thirty miles from Lovelock toward Winnemu
Jan 1, 1947
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Mining Methods at Aguilar ? Timber Shortage Dictates Cut-and-Fill Stoping ? Variable Ore Requires Skillful Operators
By D. M. Wade, F. F. Redfield
PRODUCTION at Aguilar started in 1936 and by 1942 the mine had reached a peak of 25,000 tons a month. Present production is only about 60 per cent of this capacity because of difficulties in railroad
Jan 1, 1947
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Mining Practice ? Improved Methods Cut Costs and Increase Ore Reserves - Mechanical Equipment Improves Workers? Efficiency ? Shaped Charges and Fusion Piercing Prove Effective
By Philip B. Bucky
WITH the exhaustion of the sections of iron ore bodies amenable to opencut mining the iron ore miners raise the question: "How can we mine the extensions of these ore bodies in depth with the same cos
Jan 1, 1947
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Reducing Failures in Metal Parts ? What a Practicing Metallurgist Needs to Know About Design
By Arthur E. Focke
IF a metallurgist employed in an industry producing mechanical parts or assemblies wishes to make the most of his opportunities he will be concerned with every use of metals in that industry. He will
Jan 1, 1947
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Convalescent Europe ? Personal Observations of What Is Going On There
By Harvey S. Mudd
WHEN talking about Europe it is well to endeavor to keep politics and economics apart but they have become so intermingled in recent years that the discussion of one topic inevitably leads to the othe
Jan 1, 1947
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David Douglas Moffat - Director, AIME
By AIME
A NATIVE son of Salt Lake City. David Douglas Moffat has contributed greatly to both the mineral industries and civic progress in the State of Utah. He was born in 1880 and his whole life bas been int
Jan 1, 1947
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Tri-State Operations of the St. Joseph Lead Company - Drilling Jumbos and Mechanical Loading Enable Continued Production
By Ross Blake
THE St. Joseph Lead Co. became interested in the Tri-State district in 1921 through acquisition of prospecting and development rights on approximately 20,000 acres of land extending northeastward from
Jan 1, 1947
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A Five-Year Plan for Engineering Education ? New Curricula Provide Full Development of the Engineer
By T. L. Joseph
A DEMAND for specialized knowledge has directed engineering curricula towards competency in some particular field or occupation. Preparation for life in a broad sense of completeness has received litt
Jan 1, 1947
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Mining Practice in Southeast Missouri
By L. W. Casteel, E. A. Jones
MINING the lead deposits of Southeast east Missouri has reached a high stage of technical development dictated by the scattered occurrences of low-grade ore through favorable horizons in the Bonne Ter
Jan 1, 1947
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The Herculaneum Smelter - Sintering, Blast-Furnace Smelting, and Refining Produce Chemical and Corroding Grades of Lead
By W. T. lsbell
HERCULANEUM, MO., about thirty miles south of St. Louis on the Mississippi River, is the site of the lead smelter of the St. Joseph Lead Co. The lead concentrates come by rail from the Flat River dist
Jan 1, 1947
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Milling Practice at the Edwards and Balmat Mines ? High Recovery of Zinc Made on Complex Balmat and Simple Edwards Ore
By Jay J. Burns
TWO zinc concentrating mills are operated by the St. Joseph Lead Co. in St. Lawrence County, N. Y. The Edwards mill is operating at present only sixteen hours a day treating 400 tons daily. The metall
Jan 1, 1947
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The California Oil Outlook ? How Forecasts Are Made - Possible Sources of Oil Products
By R. L. Minckler
PETROLEUM industry forecasts are constantly made and revised but are not in the nature of predictions. Particularly in the field of demand, many of the factors are far beyond control by the producing
Jan 1, 1947
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What Needs Doing in Ore Dressing ? A Briton Looks at American Technique
By Edmund J. Pryor
DURING the war years restrictions on travel, pressure of work, and the irregular arrival of technical literature from abroad combined to severely isolate Great Britain in a period of intense war expan
Jan 1, 1947
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Continuous Ore Transport - Belt Conveyor Design and Application
By R. W. Rausch
BELT-CONVEYOR 'history in this country dates back to the end of the eighteenth century. Up to 1896 they were crude in design and application. The second era, dating from 1896 to about 1920, saw s
Jan 1, 1947
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William Wallace Mein - Director, AIME
By AIME
WILLIAM WALLACE MEIN, known to his intimates as "Will" or "Billy", is a mining engineer who has taken the fundamentals of successful mining--operating, engineering, and financial-and applied them to t
Jan 1, 1947
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Ferroalloying Materials ? Demand Heavy for Most Products Though Not Equal to Wartime
By R. M. Briney
A RETURN to nonwar conditions characterized the year 1946. The acquisition and forced use, under Government auspices, of low-grade and uneconomic ores, both foreign and domestic, ceased in 1945, but t
Jan 1, 1947
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Recent Developments in the Physical Metallurgy of Copper and Copper Alloys, and in Equipment and Practice
By W. D. France, H. l. Burghoff
FABRICATORS of copper and copper alloys have contended with the problems of reconversion during the past year in endeavoring to return to the full-scale production that is demanded of them. The proble
Jan 1, 1947
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Hard Alloys Go Underground ? Tungsten Carbide Insert Bits - a Revolutionary Development in Rock Drilling
By Sheldon P. Wimpfen
EVERYWHERE in mining circles the talk is of this new development of hard faced or insert bits which hints of many changes to come in mining practice and rock drill equipment. In the past fifteen years
Jan 1, 1947
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Enrollment in Mineral Engineering Schools at All-Time High
By F. William Bloecher, William B. Plank
CURRENTLY 12,892 students are enrolled in the mineral engineering schools of the United States and Canada, marking an all-time record high for these schools. It shows a remarkably rapid recovery from
Jan 1, 1947
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Natural Gas for the Northeastern Seaboard
By Lyon F. Terry
IN contemplating the prospects of natural gas being transported from the fields where it is produced to such distant points as Philadelphia, New Jersey, New York City, and New England, let us review t
Jan 1, 1947