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  • 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
    Stock-Piling for Peace

    By AIME AIME

    ON May 5, the Washington, D. C., Section, A.I.M.E., devoted its meeting to the many-sided and perplexing question of mineral stock-piling for peace. Opening the symposium, Harry J. Wolf, of the War P

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    A Chart To Provide Approximate Correction For Temperature And Deviation From Boyle's Law

    By Albert D. Brokaw

    THE accompanying chart was devised to provide a rapid and simple method of correcting for temperature and compressibility (deviation from Boyle's law) of gas under relatively high pressures and t

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Clyde Williams ? President of the AIME, 1947

    By Clyde Williams

    A MAN who is a first-class metallurgist, engineer, and scientist and an outstanding organizer, administrator, and executive and who, at the same time, has an innate ability to "make friends and influe

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    The Boston Meeting

    By AIME AIME

    THE annual fall meeting of the Institute of Metals and the Iron and Steel divisions, in conjunction with the American .Society for Steel Treating and the Metal Congress and Show, at Boston was from ma

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    A New Method for Determining Iron Oxide in Liquid Steel

    By C. H. Herty Jr, C. H.

    FEW subjects have attracted the attention of metallurgists more than oxygen in steel. From the days of Mushet and Ledebui interest in this subject has been increasing, and as additional knowledge has

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Russia's Mineral Potential

    By Paul M. Tyler

    MILITARY power stems from industrial power and industrial power in turn depends predominantly upon an ample and assured supply of mineral raw materials. It thus becomes the duty of mineral economists

    Jan 6, 1951

  • AIME
    43. Uranium Deposits of the Shirley Basin, Wyoming

    By E. N. Harshman

    The Wind River Formation of Eocene age is the host rock for large high-grade uranium deposits in the Shirley Basin. The major deposits are in a northwest-trending belt of sandstones that were deposite

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Equipment and Facilities – Maintenance and Ancillary Facilities

    By Donald C. Myntti

    INTRODUCTION A major segment in a successful heavy equipment maintenance and repair program is the provision of well-laid out and well-equipped shop and service facilities The facilities described

    Jan 1, 1979

  • AIME
    Theory and Practice of Directed Drilling

    By R. E. Allen

    ONE of the most unusual oil field engineering accomplishments of the past two years is the development and rapid advance in the directed drilling of wells. Directed drilling as referred to herein is t

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Pure Irons - Ancient and Modern

    By J. G. Thompson

    IRON, iron everywhere, but hardly a particle of pure unadulterated iron for the metallurgist to use as a base for the protean characteristics that he develops in the alloys of iron-the modern steels.

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Ferrous Physical Metallurgy - Long-Range Fundamental Research Lags in U. S. While Soviet Russia Bids for Lead

    By John H. Hollomon

    A REVIEW of the steps which have been made to increase knowledge in the field of ferrous physical metallurgy during the closing period of World War II brings both pleasure and disappointment. Contrib

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    The Design of Blast-Furnace Gas-Engines in Belgium

    By H. Hubert

    THE first attempts at direct utilization of blast-furnace gas in engines were made in 1895. For a considerable time the gas had been burnt in Cowper stoves for heating the blast for the furnace, and u

    Nov 1, 1906

  • AIME
    The Design of Underground Excavations (1bbb18a1-ed73-457f-8650-77e4fdc0f104)

    By N. G. W., Cook

    When an excavation is made underground the original rock stresses are removed from the surfaces of the excavation. These surfaces converge to partially close the excavation and the superincumbent rock

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Ore Testing and Its Relation to Mill Results

    By LIONEL E. BOOTH

    ORE tests are made for the purpose of determining the correct methods of treatment for any particular ore. They should be conducted so as to insure that the results obtained in actual mill practice, o

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Geology of the Virginia Barite-Deposits

    By Thomas Leonard Watson

    I. HISTORICAL. BARITE has been mined for many years in various parts of Virginia, probably the earliest mining-operations being in Prince William county, within 600 ft. of the Fauquier county line, a

    Jan 9, 1907

  • 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
    Let's Improve the Ground Rules for Health & Safety (7b8c16fa-4b34-4325-8952-ff43c85b13c1)

    By James A. Clem

    Approximately 2000 years ago, the Lord admonished the scribes (lawyers) and pharisees (religious leaders of that time) that they had paid the tithe but had omitted the weightier matters of law, judgme

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    The Future of the Lead and Zinc Markets

    By Clinton H. Crane

    DR. TILNEY, the great expert on the study of the development of the brain of human beings and animals, tells us that the greatest difference between the human brain and the brain of animals is that ma

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    The Haciendas of the Cerro de Pasco Copper Corporation

    By B. T., Colley

    AS always when metallurgical operations are conducted within or close to agricultural and stock-raising regions, the question of damage due to fume and smoke presented itself when the Cerro de Pasco C

    Jan 1, 1945