Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization

Sort by

  • AIME
    NEW Haven Paper - The Minerals of Southwestern Pennsylvania

    By E. C. Pechin

    The attention of the members of the Institute of Mining Engineers is asked to a description of the minerals of Southwestern Pennsylvania, as representing the minerals of an enormous area, stretching c

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering–General - Further Discussion on a Mathematical Model for Water Movement about Bottom-Water-Drive Reservoirs

    By J. E. Warren

    The mathematical problem considered by the author1 can be given another physical interpretation which is of some practical significance. The alternative physical problem involves the approximate behav

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-Laboratory Research - Diffusion Coefficients from Capillary Flow

    By W. B. Gogarty, H. R. Bailey

    Methods are presented for determining molecular diffusion coefficients by using data from, capillary flow experiments. These methods are based on a numerical solution (presented in a previous paper) o

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - The Mineral Wealth of Southwestern Virginia

    By C. R. Boyd

    Without attempting to do more than give a preliminary or skeleton report upon the geology and minerals of Southwestern Virginia at this time, I am led to hope that the great commercial importance of t

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-General - Two-Phase Flow in Two-Dimensional System-Effects of Rate, Viscosity and Density on Fluid Displacement in Porous Media

    By R. G. Hawthorne

    This report is concerned with fluid displacement in porous media, in those cases where viscous and gravitational forces control the displacement. Such a system would usually be found in a sand body of

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Formation of Fissures and the Origin of their Mineral Content

    By A. J. Brown

    The causes that have formed fissures in the earth's crust, and the agencies that have converted them into metallic beds, are amongst the most important and interesting subjects that can engage th

  • AIME
    Boston Meeting - February, 1873

    THE Institute assembled in the Hall of the Boston Natural History Society on Tuesday evening. Dr. T. Sterry Hunt, of the Boston Institute of Technology, after a brief address of welcome to the Inst

  • AIME
    Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Influence of Propping Sand Wettability on Producti...

    By C. S. Matthews, M. J. F. Rosenbaum

    The purpose of thir work wax to lcarn it~lzut infori~lation could he obtained from various typs of pilot water floods and to attempt to find the optunum pilot patter11, for a revervoir which had previ

  • AIME
    Natural Gas Technology - A Computer Simulation of Gas Flow in Long Pipelines

    By J. E. Powers, T. D. Taylor, N. E. Wood

    A computer program has been developed to simulate a gas transmission 1ine operating under transient conditions. The program was developed by application of the basic mass and momentum balance equation

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering–General - The Effect of Oil Production Rate Upon Performance of Wells Producing from More Than One Horizon

    The performance of a two-horizon depletion-type reservoir produced through combination wells is analyzed. By introducing some simplifying approximations, it has been possible to obtain formulas which

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-General - A Method of Predicting the Performance of Unstable Miscible Displacement in Heterogeneous Media

    By E. J. Koval

    Practical miscible displacement processes will be characterized by lingering of the solvent into the oil. The lingering process is brought on by viscosity differences, and can be accentuated by channe

  • AIME
    Drilling - Equipment, Methods and Materials - Laboratory Drilling Rate and Filtration Studies of Clay and Polymer Drilling Fluids

    By C. P. Lawhon, J. P. Simpson, W. M. Evans

    Recent efforts to design drilling fluids for increased drifting rates have confirmed some laboratory results of other investigators, but have also produced additional data that should be considered. T

  • AIME
    Pittsburgh Paper - Three-High Rolls

    By Alexander L. Holley

    A CHARACTERISTIC, and, to Americans, an amusing discussion of the three-high rail-mill, arose out of the reading of Mr. Lauth's paper on three-high plate-mills, at the Glasgow meeting of the Iron

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - A Century of Mining and Metallurgy in the United States

    By Hon. Abrams S. Hewitt

    Gentlemen : If my first words were other than those of thanks for the high honor of being called to preside over the American Institute of Mining Engineers, I should do injustice alike to you and to m

  • AIME
    Drilling – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Laboratory Studies of Formation Damage in Sands Con...

    By A. E. Anderson, H. J. Hilll

    Laboratory data for 155 field muds and 77 .shales have been used to develop correlations to estimate the net streaming potential component of the SP. Analysis of these data and comparison with field t

  • AIME
  • AIME
    New York Paper - Certain Mechanical Changes in Bessemer Steel at the Königin-Marien-Hütte, near Zwickau, Saxony

    By Archiblad MacMartin

    The Kunigin-Marien-Hiitte is the only works in Germany where the Bessemer process is carried on by the direct method. The Besserner plant there, is arranged after the true English type, and the only r

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering – General - Application of Decline Curves to Gravity-Drainage Reservoirs in the Stripper Stage

    By C. S. Matthews, H. C. Lefkovits

    Drilling progress is often delayed by sticking of the drill string. The development of preventive and remedial methods has been hampered by incomplete understanding of the sticking mechanism. A rec

  • AIME
    Easton Meeting - October, 1873

    The Institute assembled in the metallurgical lecture-room of Pardee Hall, Lafayette College, at 7 o'clock P.M. on Tuesday evening, October 21st. The session was opened by the President, R. W. Ray