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  • AIME
    How to Use the Engineering Societies Library

    By Ralph H. Phelps

    WHAT information do you have on precision investment casting? Please send me all available information on the removal of paraffin from oil wells and pipe lines. How can I find out how to remove magnes

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Boston and Keweenaw

    By J. Robert Van Peli

    IT was a strange but highly fruitful marriage-that union of hardy explorers, seeking the rich treasures of copper in the Lake Superior wilderness, with Boston's aristocracy of brains, capital, an

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Stream Pollution...A Mineral Industry Problem

    By John V. Beall

    STREAM pollution caused by waste waters from mineral industry operations is a problem that has grown up with the industry. Its importance to each operator is dependent on the amount and type of waste

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Ferroalloy Metals

    By R. G. Knickerbocker

    A STURDY and consistent expansion of the metal industry occurred in 1947 exemplified by an increase of approximately 30 per cent in steel consumption over 1946. For this major reason, ferroalloy metal

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    German Metallurgical Practice Reviewed

    By Paul M. Tyler

    NOW that the dust of World War II has settled and we and our allies are faced with extravagant losses of men, money, and materials, virtually the only hope that the United States and Britain have in t

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Mine Leasing

    By Lysle E. Shaffer

    INCREASING attention has been given in the last decade to the possibilities of mine leasing in the West. The practice as described in this article does not refer to the leasing of entire properties fo

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Industrial Nonmetallic Minerals

    By G. W. Josephson

    JUDGING by the progressive atmosphere prevailing in the nonmetallic mineral industries during the past year, postwar conditions were healthful though inflationary. Demand for most industrial mineral

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Coal Industry Has Biggest Peacetime Year

    By Evan Evans

    IT is appropriate to evaluate 1947 in review as a year of a peacetime record production of about 676,000,000 tons of coal (anthracite and bituminous), closely approaching the extraordinary wartime out

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Subsidies for Mine Production

    By Evan Just

    DIRECT subsidies for mine production in this country began as an outgrowth of wartime 'price regulation. The price-fixing authorities realized that the volume of production to be required from do

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Rejuvenating European Mining

    By Charles Will Wright

    MINERAL production in almost all European countries suffered a sharp setback because of the war. Plants were damaged, transportation facilities disrupted, and labor dispersed and demoralized. Since th

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Mineral Industry Support Needed for European Recovery Program

    By Robert P. Koenig

    FOR the first time other than on occasion of war the people of the United States are experiencing full-scale participation in world affairs. Public concern has seldom been so involved with conditions

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Gold Versus Inflation

    By Donald H. McLaughlin

    PRICES paid for goods and services in paper currencies are undoubtedly determined by many interrelated factors, but among them none is more specific in pushing prices toward higher and higher levels t

    Jan 1, 1948

  • NIOSH
    RI 4173 Antimony Deposits in Alaska - AK

    By Walford S. Wright, NORMAN EBBLEY

    During the past decade (1937 to 1947), including the war years of heavy demand for metals, the United States realized about one-eighth of its antimony requirements from domestic production, chiefly in

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    What's Wrong With Engineering Education?

    By B. M. Larsen

    NEVER having actually tried to engage in the systematic education of anyone, and having little direct knowledge of the practical problems and limitations in the field of education, I can pose only as

    Jan 1, 1948

  • NIOSH
    RI 4150 Investigation of Coal Deposits for Local Use in the Arctic Regions of Alaska and Proposed Mine Development

    By Albert L. Toenges, Theodore R. Jolley

    "INTRODUCTION The construction of frame houses (fig. 1) in recent years instead of the conventional sod hut (igloo) (fig. 2) by the Eskimos in the villages along the Arctic Ocean has increased the dem

    Dec 1, 1947

  • NIOSH
    RI 4155 Investigation of the Iron-Bearing Formation of the Western Gogebic Range, Iron County. WIS

    By Clyde L. Holmberg, Paul Zinner

    "INTRODUCTION In view of the large tonnage of low-grade iron ore and iron-bearing material known to exist at the western limits of the Gogebic range, the Bureau of Mines undertook an investigation of

    Dec 1, 1947

  • NIOSH
    RI 4176 Annual Rpt. on Explosives, Explosions & Flames, FY 1946

    By Bernard Lewis

    During the past 10 years the technical investigations conducted by the Explosives Division of the Mine and Explosives Bureau of the Bureau of Mines have been described in a series of summarizing repor

    Dec 1, 1947

  • NIOSH
    RI 4137 Concentration of Carbonate and Oxide Manganese Ores from the Vicinity of Tracy, Central California

    By B. K. Shibler, K. C. Vincent, W. W. Agey

    "INTRODUCTION As a part of the investigation of domestic manganese deposits, examining engineers of the Bureau of Mines collected samples of ore from three from three properties in the general vicinit

    Nov 1, 1947

  • NIOSH
    RI 4134 Toxicity & Flame Resistance of Thermosetting Plastics

    By Lorenz E. Sieffert, Lawrence B. Berger, H. H. Sehrenk, Ralph W. Stewar, James A. Gale

    "INTRODUCTION The purpose of the investigation discussed in this article was to evaluate the toxic hazard from gases produced when thermosetting plastic materials used for electrical insulating purpos

    Oct 1, 1947

  • NIOSH
    IC 7416 Limestone as Building Material

    By Nan C. Jensen, Oliver Bowles

    Stone , the foundation of the continents and the floor of the oceans , is one of the most substantial and enduring of all substances that constitute the material universe . Stone furnished rude shelte

    Oct 1, 1947