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  • AIME
    Biographical Notices

    HUBERT INGERSOLL ELLIS Hubert Ingersoll Ellis, who met accidental death on Jan. 6, 1919, in eastern Washington, had already advanced far in the profession of mining engineering and gave promise of a

    Jan 4, 1919

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - A Reference-Scheme for Mine-Workings

    By Wilbur E. Sanders

    At some period during the operation of metalliferous and other commercially valuable mineral-deposits in connection with their underground mining, when the developments therein have become so extensiv

    Jan 1, 1907

  • AIME
    The Dip Needle In Stratigraphy

    By H. R. Aldrich

    THIS paper presents some of the results obtained during the field season of 1919 while mapping, in detail, the stratigraphy of the Gogebic Range in Wisconsin. The detailed stratigraphic section for th

    Jan 8, 1920

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Continued Discussion on the Physics of Steel (with Discussion)

    By William R. Webster

    The unusual interest taken in the papers on steel at the New York (1922) meeting showed that the time is ripe for the renewal of the general discussion of the physics of steel, on the same lines that

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Molybdenum Steels (with Discussion)

    By John A. Mathews

    It is twenty years since the writer made his first molybdenum steels and others were making them commercially five years earlier but the prevailing opinion seems to be that molybdenum steels are new;

    Jan 1, 1922

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Present Conditions in Mexican Oil Fields and an Outlook into- the Future

    By Valentine R. Garflas

    The Mexican oil fields, during 1921, produced in round numbers 203,000,000 bbl. of which 176,000,000 bbl., or 86 per cent., were exported, the bulk of these exports, or about 73.3 per cent., going to

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Papers - Solubility of Nitrogen in Liquid Iron (With Discussion)

    By Donald W. Murphy, John Chipman

    Recent developments in iron alloys containing nitrogen have indicated that this element may exert a considerable influence on the properties of the metal. This influence is not always in an undesirabl

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Southwest Texas during 1935

    By Olin G. Bell

    At the beginning of the year 1935 the older fields in Southwest Texas, and particularly those discovered during 1934, had been practically delimited and only normal development continued. As a result,

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Papers - Blast-furnace Fuels-Anthracite Coal (With Discussion)

    By Ralph H. Sweetser

    In these days of the almost exclusive use of byproduct coke as the blast-furnace fuel in this country, it may seem out of place, and smacking too much of reminiscing, to say anything about the use of

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Crystallographic Uniformity of Lineage Structure in Copper Single Crystals (With Discussion)

    By Alden B. Greninger

    The study of mosaic structure of crystals1 has been confined until recently to the field of theoretical physics. Crystallographers, in general, have neglected the subject, although X-ray crystallograp

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - An X-ray Study of the Iron-palladium and Nickel-palladium Systems (T. P. 1047)

    By Ralph Hultgren

    Few phase diagrams of alloys composed of two transition metals have been adequately studied, probably because of the high melting points involved. Transition metals are the elements that have inner sh

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - West Texas Oil Development in 1939

    By John G. H. Crump, E. W. Owen, Peter P. Gregory

    .Although oil Production in West Texas in 1939 reached the highest figure for any year since the inauguration of proration, drilling activity continued in the decline that had commerlced the previous

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in South Arkansas in 1939

    By Warren B. Weeks

    Continued development in the deeper fields discovered during 1937 and 1938 was largely responsible for the 16 per cent (2,913,400-bbl.) increase in production, bringing the 1939 output to 21,376,230 b

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Papers - Suggested Classification of Surface Mining Methods (T. P. 604, with discussion)

    By J. R. Thoenen

    THE preper classification of mining methods has received the earnest study of many mining engineers and has resulted in much technical controversy, depending no doubt upon the point from which classif

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Foreword (28c0e559-95ad-4388-8347-29abcd5ccc82)

    "In the spring of 1927, six members of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers met for dinner at the Chemists' Club in New York to discuss the possibility of setting up a com

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Buffalo Paper - The Impurities of Water

    By A. E. Hunt, G. P. Clapp

    This paper constitutes in substance a part of a more elaborate chapter, accompanied with extended tables of analyses, prepared for the book of Mr. Fred. H. Whipple on " Water-Supply." In advanee of th

    Jan 1, 1889

  • AIME
    The Determination Of Grain Size In Metals*

    By Zay Jeffries

    IT is well known that many properties of a given metal vary with the size of grain or cell. For most industrial purposes, where high ultimate strength and high elastic limit are desired, the manufactu

    Jan 12, 1915

  • AIME
    Problems In Sulfide Ore Processing

    By Nathaniel Arbiter

    INTRODUCTION Almost seventy-five years ago problems in the recovery of sulfides from then designated slime fractions were the impetus for the development of flotation. The fall-off in recovery by

    Jan 1, 1979

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - The Formation of Acid Mine Drainage

    By K. L. Temple, A. R. Colmer

    ACID coal mine drainage presents a peculiarly difficult problem for two principal reasons. First is the fact that the amount of acid water discharged from active and abandoned mines constantly increas

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Manufacture Of Steel Rails

    By Robert Hunt

    The American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers was the first American technical organization to consider steel-rail specifications and sections. If I am not mistaken, the first contribut

    Jan 9, 1919