Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
New York Paper - Magnetite Deposits of Eastern Porto Rico (with Discussion)
By Charles R. Fettke
In connection with the gathering of data for a report on the geology of the Humacao district of southeastern Porto Rico during the summer of 1916, under the auspices of the Scientific Survey of Porto
Jan 1, 1924
-
Engineering: A Profession
By A. B. Parsons
LECTURE, it appears, is a discourse that is supposed to be instructive. I am quite sure that you will derive no instruction from what I have to say. I will be satisfied if my remarks provoke thought a
Jan 1, 1933
-
Titanium - A Growing Industry - War-Born U. S. Production Has Good Chance to Survive Postwar Competition
By OTTO HERRES
TITANIUM is estimated to be the ninth most plentiful element, ranking after iron, aluminum, and magnesium, and ahead of copper, lead, and zinc. Vast quantities of titanium are widespread throughout th
Jan 1, 1946
-
Extractive Metallurgy Division - Stoichiometry of Lead Telluride
By I. Cadoff, E. Miller, K. Komarek
Jan 1, 1960
-
Buffalo Paper - The Evolution of Mine-Surveying Instruments (See, as to Discussion, Secretary's note, p. 919)
By Dunbar D. Scott
The development in the perfection of mine-surveying instruments has been by no means rapid, as it has depended somewhat on the details of construction borrowed from astronomical and geodetic theodolit
Jan 1, 1899
-
Performance Tests of an Experimental Installation of Cyclone Thickeners at the Shamrock Mine
By T. Fraser, R. L. Sutherland
Under a cooperative agreement between United States Bureau of Mines and the Truax-Traer Coal Company, some operating-scale experiments have been made with the cyclone thickener in the preparation plan
Jan 1, 1949
-
Modernizing the World's Largest Lead Smelter
By A. B. Parsons
LAST YEAR (1934) saw the completion of a ten-year program of reconstruction and modernization of the world's largest lead- smelting plant, that of the ' Broken Hill Associated Smelters Propr
Jan 1, 1935
-
Standardization Of Compressed-Air Terms
Upon the recommendation of its Technical Committee, The Com-pressed Air Society has adopted the following definitions of, certain terms. Displacement.-The displacement of an air compressor is the vol
Jan 8, 1918
-
Industrial Minerals - Instrumentation in Ideal's New Houston Cement Plant
By Thomas B. Douglas
INSTRUMENTATION in the process industries can no longer be regarded as a convenience, but rather an absolute necessity. Although many chemical processes must already be conducted with instruments, eve
Jan 1, 1959
-
Industrial Minerals ? Outstanding Advances in Technology and Uses
By Oliver Bowles
DELICATE PLANTS are now put to bed for the winter under glass-wool or rock-wool blankets. Thus arise new and unexpected uses for non-metallic materials and rocks and, at the same time, certain unique
Jan 1, 1938
-
Papers - Constitution of Alloys - Equilibrium Relations in Aluminum-copper-magnesium and Aluminum-copper- magnesium Silicide Alloys of High Purity (With Discussion)
By E. H. Dix
The work of Merical and other investigators indicates that the phenomenon of age-hardening in alloys of the duralumin type is primarily dependent upon the variation in the solubility of copper with te
Jan 1, 1932
-
Papers - A. I. M. E. Publications - Contents of 1931 Volumes
On the Art of Metallography (Howe Memorial Lecture), by F. F. Lucas; Beneficiation of Iron Ore. Abstract of paper by C. E. Williams followed by Round Table Discussion; A Statistical Analysis of Blast-
Jan 1, 1931
-
Geophysics - AFMAG: A New Airborne Electromagnetic Prospecting Method
By S. H. Ward
Since the advent of the first airborne electromagnetic system, it has been evident that such systems were inherently limited to shallow depths of exploration of the orderof 100 to 200 feet. Hence in 1
Jan 1, 1961
-
Coal Looks To The Future
By T. Carl Shelton
The coal industry of the United States in 1967 had reasons to be both exuberant and concerned about its present and future role in the economy of the country. Continuing a momentum that began in the e
Jan 2, 1968
-
Melting and Casting Some Gold Alloys
By Edward Capillon
THE problem of scrap is probably of greater importance inn the production of gold, silver and other precious metal alloys than is the case for base metals and alloys. Remelting of gold and silver scra
Jan 1, 1930
-
Steep Rock Lake, Canada's First Big Iron Mine
By H. C. Rickaby
BY August 1944 Canada expects to be shipping 56 percent hematite ore from its new Steep Rock iron mine, via Port Arthur on Lake Superior, to the steelmaking centers in Canada and the United States. Th
Jan 1, 1943
-
Another Big Annual Meeting Assured
By AIME AIME
FIVE days, extending from Monday, Feb. 18 to Friday, Feb. 22, inclusive, will be required for the annual meeting this year. The first fours days will be devoted to reading and discussion of papers, ge
Jan 1, 1929
-
Section Delegates Find Much of Common Interest
By C. M. Smith
DELEGATES from 26 Local Sections and- Divisions of the Institute had three stimulating sessions during the Annual Meeting, a few topics still remaining to be discussed after the two Monday sessions..
Jan 1, 1935
-
Place of Government, State and Federal, in Rationalizing Mineral Production
By C. K. Leith
OTHERS here are far better qualified than I to discuss some of the specific proposals for government regulation of the oil industry. I shall make no attempt to carry oil to Oklahoma. The question of p
Jan 1, 1932
-
Tin Industry of Yunnan, China
By MARSHALL D. DRAPER
CHINA is one of the large producers of the world's tin. About 95 per cent of the total Chinese production comes from the Kotchiu district in the southern part of the province of Yunnan. Yunnan oc
Jan 1, 1931