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  • AIME
    Personal (8542ff6c-0034-46c7-8225-066b3939cad7)

    (Members are urged 'to, send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or, their fellow-members.) Members and guests who registered at Institute headquarters during the peri

    Jan 11, 1915

  • AIME
    Arizona Bureau of Mines, and College of Mines and Engineering

    Arizona Bureau of Mines and College of Mines and Engineering, University of Arizona, Tucson, Ariz. Lists of the maps and bulletins available will be sent upon request to G M Butler, Director, A

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Mine Accident Cost Data Bases And Their Applications

    By Donald N. H. Chi, Henry E. Perlee

    Accident cost data bases for all mining sectors covering the period 1975 through 1980 have been created on the PDP-11/70 and VAX-11/780 computers at the Bureau of Mines Pittsburgh Research Center. The

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation in 1949

    By S. J. Swainson

    "It appears to me that the chief progress in milling operations in America have been made in the steady improvement of existing practice through both higher extractions and increased efficiencies of o

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    The Outlook for the Coal Industry

    By Howard N. Eavenson

    TWO months ago, just after the coal code hearing in Washington, one of our leading liberal weeklies printed a study of the coal industry made by an economist in the Administration, and on the outside

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Membership (71fad924-b6d5-4e79-a5a2-36b5f235a8a2)

    NEW MEMBERS The following list comprises the names of those persons who became members during the period of Mar. 10, 1917, to Apr. 10, 1917. ADKINS, HARVEY S Adkins & Denham, Engineers, Box 291,. Ha

    Jan 5, 1917

  • AIME
    The Geographical Distribution Of Mining Development In The United States.

    Discussion of the paper of E. W. Parker, presented at the New York meeting, February, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 75, March, 1913, pp. 443 to 451. A MEMBER :-I would like to call attention to t

    Jan 5, 1913

  • AIME
    Health and Safety - Excellent Record Forecast for the Year

    By C. M. Fellman

    AVAILABLE data for the first nine months of the Year indicate that accident occurrence in metal mining was well on its way to an all-time low for 1939. However, the relatively rapid pickup in mining p

    Jan 1, 1940

  • 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
    Midvale Lead Smelter for Company and Custom Ores

    By Casper A. Nelson, Wendell M. Whitecotton

    A WIDE variety of lead ore is treated by the Midvale Smelter, for it is a custom plant not only treating Company lead concentrate and direct-smelting ores but also custom ores and concentrates, princi

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Development of the Iron and Steel Industry on the Niagara Frontier

    By W. A. James

    NATURE endowed the Niagara Frontier with great resources but it was the molding of these resources by the early pioneers that assured its future development. This great industrial district of New York

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Drilling and Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Buckling of Tubing in Pumping Wells, Its Effects and Means for Controlling It

    By Arthur Lubinski, K. A. Blenkarn

    It is explained why the bottom portion of freely suspended tubing in a pumping well buckles and straightens in succession during the pumping cycle. Field evidence of resulting rod-on-tubing wear, exce

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Part IX – September 1968 - Papers - On the Detection of Retained Austenite in High-Carbon Steels by Fe57 Mössbauer Spectroscopy, with Appendix

    By B. W. Christ, P. M. Giles

    Mossbauer effect measurewents have been made on I-mil-thick foils of commercial 1 wt pct C steel and Fe-2 wt pct C alloy. The experimental method required about 3 to 5 vol pct of a phase in the nzul

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Some Suggestions Concerning Ore Genesis

    By Grimes, J. A.

    EXTENSIVE discovery 'and rapid exploitation of orebodies within the past half century have attracted many able geologists to the mining industry and furnished them a wealth of data from which to

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Research, Patents, and the Kilgore Bill ? Private Initiative in Research, With Patent Protection, a Proved Success in America

    By Anthony William Deller

    MAJOR battles in the present war have been fought in American research laboratories. Without the outstanding contributions made by our scientists, engineers, and technologists in mining and metallurgy

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Geophysical Exploration - Less Seismic Work - Use of Gravimeter Increases - Various Techniques Perfected

    By Sherwin F. Kelly

    THE geophysical scene shifts and alters, the emphasis changes, and new possibilities loom, but the tendency is always towards widening the field and deepening the analytical penetration. Seismic metho

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Notes on the Mexican Mining Industry and Some of Its Active Companies

    By AIME AIME

    MEXICO embraces one of the great metal and petroleum producing provinces of the world. In this respect its history dates back to the overthrow of the Aztec empire by a Spanish force under Hernando Cor

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    World Minerals ? War and Postwar ? Wartime Problems Met by the Government ? Private Industry Will Have Changed Conditions to Meet

    By Alan M. Bateman

    POSSIBLE postwar trends of the more important world minerals will be determined in part by their present world position and by the acts and forces that have operated during the war period, so it is de

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Value of the Mines of the United States

    By W. R. Ingalls

    WHAT proportion of the national wealth is represented by' the producing mines of the country?' Or by the- mining and metallurgical industry-as a whole, for it is impossible to make-an econom

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    New Developments in Unburned Magnesite Brick for the Metallurgical Industry

    By A. CHESTER BEATTY

    MAGNESIUM oxide is by far the most refractory of the common oxides, since it has a melting point of 5072 deg. F. as compared with 3110 deg. F., the melting point of silica (crystobalite) ; 3722 deg. F

    Jan 1, 1931