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  • AIME
    Electronic Tramp Iron Detector for Conveyor Belts

    By C. M. Marquardt

    Tramp iron and steel moving on a conveyor belt cause small currents to be generated in a coil situated in a strong magnetic field, which are converted to an alternating current and are amplified. The

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    How the St. Joseph Lead Company Grew ? A Forward-Looking Management Builds a Great Enterprise From a Small Missouri Mine

    By Irwin H. Cornell

    BRIEFLY stated, the history of the St. Joseph Lead Co. is the story of how a group of men, working for ten years as officers without salaries and stockholders without dividends, developed a small mine

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Some Recent Trends in Prospecting: Chemical, Biogeochemical, and Geobotanical Methods

    By Kalervo Rankama

    UNTIL a few years ago, geological mapping, the study of ore boulders, and different geophysical methods were the principal means used in the systematic search for mineral deposits covered by a layer o

    Jan 1, 1947

  • SME
    Cable Bolting For Pillar Recovery At The Magmont Mine

    By S. R. Dismuke

    Ore at the Magmont Mine in southeast Missouri is extracted by the room and pillar method on two and sometimes three horizons. In 1991, an innovative plan was formulated for recovery of high grade ore

    Apr 13, 2011

  • AIME
    Ore Concentration and Gold Milling - Progress Recorded in Flotation Machines and Reagents, By-product Recovery, Alkalinity Control, Conveyors, and Electric Ears

    By E. W. Engelmann

    RAPID progress has been made during the past year in the copper mills throughout the country. Particular efforts have been made to increase the fine-grinding efficiency by the installation of larger c

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Lubrication of Mining Equipment ? Part 2 - Mine Cars, Locomotives, Steam Engines and Turbines, Diesels, Motors and Generators

    By Charles W. Frey

    OF all the machinery used in mining work, mine cars are probably the most abused. They are hauled through water and muck, up hill and down grade, whipped around curves, bumped and jerked, and exposed

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    The Place of the Engineer in Modern Life

    By Harvey N. Davis

    MUCH has been written and said during the last twenty years about the place of the engineer in modern life, about the fundamental role that he plays both in developing and in maintaining the material

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Evaluating the Properties of Coal for Use in a Given Steam Plant

    By G. B. Gould, F. M. Gibson

    IN DECEMBER, 1934, the joint Committee on Fuel Values, of the American Institute of Minim and Metallurgical Engineers and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, submitted a preliminary report,

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Some Aspects of the Coal Mining Industry

    By S. A. TAYLOR

    THERE is probably no other mineral industry of which the public has as much information and misinformation as it has of the coal industry. Unfortunately, however, the general public's knowledge o

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Alloy Steels

    By C. E. MACQUICC

    WITHIN a period considerably less than two decades, the engineering view of alloy steels has greatly changed-both as to their composition, and applications. Inasmuch as the elements used in manufactur

    Jan 1, 1930

  • SME
    Toledo Waterways Initiative—Completion of an 18-Year LTCP Program - RETC2021

    By Leo Gentile, David Selhorst

    The $528 million Toledo Waterways Initiative (TWI) was implemented by the City of Toledo in 2002 and completed in August 2020. Toledo is one of many US cities required to implement a Long-Term Control

    Jun 13, 2021

  • AIME
    Engineers Need More Than Technical Capacity

    By J. L. Perry

    FOR many years, you and your fellow members of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers have devotedly and ably applied yourselves to the art of making iron and steel. having forem

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Progress in Mining Methods During 1931

    By Scott Turner

    AS IN OTHER lines of engineering, progress in mining was influenced during 1931 by the world-wide economic depression. Low-metal prices ? resulted in active efforts to reduce production costs of base-

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Rare Metal Developments

    By Donald M. Liddell, G. C. RIDDELL

    THE cosmic ray continues to engage the attention of the physicists, and according to Millikan and Compton, experiments of the past summer indicate that these rays must come from interstellar space, bu

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Steam Power Plant and Electrical Distribution

    By Stanley F. French, Bruno F. Koch

    Although the amount of dust that will be actually recovered in the six main dust-control systems cannot be accurately stated until the tests mentioned previously are carried out, it is estimated that

    Jan 1, 1942

  • CIM
    Assessment of the Efficiencies of Auxiliary Ventilation Systems Using Empirical Methods

    By Raymond S. Suglo

    Increasing depths of mining coupled with the mechanization of most underground mining operations have led to growing complexities in the mine environments with the production of large amounts of gaseo

    May 1, 2001

  • SME
    Computerized Mine Planning In Michigan Iron Ore (PRIPRINT 94-20 )

    By A. E. Koski

    This paper will review recent developments in the area of mine planning at the Empire Mine. It illustrates how one of the largest iron mines in North America has adapted computerized mine planning to

    Jan 1, 1994

  • AIME
    Piping and Segregation in Steel Ingots

    By H. M. Howe

    A Discussion of the paper of Professor Howe, presented at the London Meeting, July, 1906, and printed in Bi-Monthly Bulletin, No. 14, March, 1907, pp. 169 to 274. SECRETARY'S NOTE.-M. Beutter&

    Jul 1, 1907

  • NIOSH
    RI 2354 Mercury Poisoning

    By R. R. Sayers

    There is probably no industry , trade , or art in which mercury is used but what has produced some cases of mercury poisoning . This is true of the mining and smelting of mercury , where the hazard ha

    May 1, 1922

  • NIOSH
    RI 6571 Development of a Hydraulic Device for Measuring Relative Pressure Changes in Coal During Mining- A Progress Report

    By Thomas C. Miller, Rudolph Sporcic

    A relatively simple and inexpensive encapsulated hydraulic device has been developed by the Bureau of Mines to facilitate study of coal bumps , and to measure pressure changes in a coalbed as it is su

    Jan 1, 1964