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  • AIME
    Oil Men Hold Lively Meetings at Fort Worth and Los Angeles

    By AIME AIME

    THE petroleum engineers have the conference habit. They drop in, thresh things over, and drop out. No time is wasted. So it was at the Fort Worth meeting of the Petroleum Division, Thursday and Friday

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals Record Progress Over a Wide Front

    By Oliver Bowles

    GLASS razor blades, glass chairs, and marble window panes attest that creative genius was still active in 1935. Many less striking, though doubtless more important, developments are to be recorded for

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Further Progress in Production and Use of High-Grade Zinc-Oxide Situation Interesting

    By Frank G. Breyer

    THE .following developments in the zinc field during 1935 are listed in the order of their importance. Each will he amplified in later paragraphs. In the field o f Metallic Zinc: (1) Construction of

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    What the Building Shortage Means to the Mineral Industries

    By Oliver Bowles, Carl A. Gnam

    THE construction industry normally contributes extensively to the general economic welfare of all sections of the country. Billions of dollars are spent for materials and labor, and the success or fai

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Practical and Legal Aspects of Mine Financing

    By Philip S. Mathews

    THE tremendous stimulus given to the mining industry by the gold and silver policy of the present administration has found the capital market for mines ill prepared to afford practical means of financ

    Jan 1, 1936

  • NIOSH
    IC 6844 Jade

    By ALICE V. Petar

    Through the courtesy of the State Department, the Bureau of Mines has received a compreensive report on the jede industry of Burma, pre- pared by American Consul Winfield H. Scott, Rangoon, Burza. Thi

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Rolling Strip Steel at the Inland Steel Company's Plant

    By WILFRED SYKES

    THE story of the rolling of strip steel is not limited to any one plant or individual or group of individuals. It is a story with many ramifications. First of all, it should be understood that the str

    Jan 1, 1936

  • NIOSH
    RI 3282 A Procedure for the Removal and Determination of Small Amounts of Benzene in Biological Material

    By H. H. Schrenk, W. P. Yant, P. H. Mautz

    "In a study of the chemistry and pathology of chronic benzene poisoning, which was conducted cooperatively by the United. States Bureau of Mines, the Barrett Co., and the producers of benzene, it was

    Aug 1, 1935

  • CIM
    Industrial Relationship

    By Selwyn G. Blaylock

    There is no more important problem today than industrial relationship, and probably none that is receiving more thought. But in these days of Epie and Utopia, one has to be rather careful in speaking

    Jan 1, 1935

  • NIOSH
    IC 6830 Minor Mineral Fertilizer Materials ? Foreword

    By Bertrand L. Johnson

    The major elements essential to plant growth are nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus. These three constituents of the soil are removed relatively rapidly by growing crops and consequently are the main

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Milling Practice – Iron, Tungsten and Base Metals - Concentration of Polish Bleischarley Ores

    By M. C. Messner, L. P. Davidson

    The Giesche Spas Akcyjna, in Polish Upper Silesia, produces zinc, lead and coal, together with many byproducts emanating from the zinc-lead ores. The development of the concern in the 230 years of its

    Jan 1, 1935

  • CIM
    Costs of Taxation in the Mining Industry

    By A. S. Baillie

    THE subject of taxes appears to engage our attention altogether too lightly. At least it would seem that, notwithstanding the increase in the cost of government, and its concomitant increased taxation

    Jan 1, 1935

  • CIM
    Historical Notes on the Patio Process

    By T. A. Rickard

    FROM AN OLD MANUSCRIPT THE text for this contribution to the history of the Patio process is a page taken from a Spanish manuscript of Bartholomé Arzaj Sanches y Uela, now in the possession of the li

    Jan 1, 1935

  • NIOSH
    IC 6869 Asbestos - Milling, Marketing, And Fabrication ? Introduction

    By Oliver Bowles

    This paper is the third of a series of reports on asbestos prepared by the Bureau of Mines. The reports already issued contain general information, including descriptions of deposits throughout the wo

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    The Economics of the Distribution of Anthracite

    By Norman Patton

    THE subject assigned is so broad that thorough discussion is well-night impossible within the space allotted, and further, few specific data are available upon which to predicate conclusions concernin

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Problems in the Flotation of Gold

    By R. A., Pallanch

    THOUGH the flotation of gold ores has come into the lime- light largely in recent years, it is not a product of recent economic conditions but rather as old as flotation itself. It could hardly be oth

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Die-Casting - What the Industry Has Learned and Given to Others

    By Sam Tour

    WHAT is a die-casting and what is the die-casting industry? From the literal translation of the words "die" and "casting"' one concludes that a die-casting is a casting made in a die. The casting

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Mining and Milling at Broken Hill, Australia

    By M. W. BERNEWITZ

    IT is 27 years since I last visited Broken Hill, New South Wales, one of the world's greatest lead-silver-zinc districts. Then, the flota¬tion of ores was in its infancy. The Minerals Separation

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Physical Metallurgists Apply Theoretical Data to Practice - Annual Review of the Institute of Metals Division

    By Albert J. Phillips

    FOR the most part, recent changes in nonferrous physical metallurgy have been gradual and of a transition nature rather than abrupt modifications of existing methods. Development of new alloys contain

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Amateur Engineering: How Two Students Spent a Summer

    By James P. Sloss

    MOST students that plan to enter the mining profession attempt to obtain some kind of practical experience before graduation. Six or seven years ago it was an easy matter for undergraduates to find em

    Jan 1, 1935