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  • AIME
    Mine Ventilation - Permissible Limits of Toxic and Noxious Gases in Mine and Tunnel Ventilation (with Discussion)

    By R. R. Sayers

    Ventilation may be defined as the process by which vitiated air of an enclosed or partly enclosed space is continuously replaced by fresh air. Fresh air has been defined as invigorating pure air. Pure

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    John Van Wicheren Reynders - Honorary Member, A. I. M. E.

    HONORARY Membership in the Institute is limited to twenty and the roster is now only fifteen, so Dr. Reynders becomes a member of a select circle. All of his life, following graduation from Rensselaer

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Reservoir Rock Characteristics - Characteristics of the Delaware Formation

    By R. E. Jenkins

    The Bell Canyon member of the Delaware Mountain group has yielded quite a large number of fields in which completion and production problems have been numerous and complex. Reserves are difficult to e

  • AIME
    Pitting of Stainless Steels

    By H. H. Uhlig

    Soon after general use of stainless steels began, it was observed in practice that certain combinations of factors tended to induce corrosion by pitting. For most applications this was a serious drawb

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Development and Production in East and East Central Texas for 1938

    By D. V. Carter, F. M. Hackbusch

    Beginning the year 1938, the East and East Central Texas district comprised 48 counties, which is equivalent to the Texas Railroad Commission districts 5 and 6. At the close of the year there were 46

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Papers - Domestic Production - Development in East Texas and Along the Balcones Fault Zone, 1929 (With Discussion)

    By F. E. Poulson

    The discovery of two new fields, Van, in East Texas, and Darst Creek, in the Balcones fault zone, is the outstanding development in 1929. The first six months was one of the most inactive periods in t

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Papers - Nonmetallic Minerals - Application of the Wire Saw in Marble Quarrying (With Discussion)

    By W. M. Weigel

    The first successful use of the wire saw in slate quarrying in the United States was late in 1926, at the quarry of the Colonial Slate Co. near Wind Gap, Pa. This installation was sponsored and superv

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Research In Methods And Equipment

    By Kenneth J. Kurry

    12.2-1. Introduction. Successful management constantly strives to improve its methods and equipment in order to produce a better product at reduced cost. It is not enough that managers be cost conscio

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Development and Production in East and East Central Texas for 1938

    By D. V. Carter, F. M. Hackbusch

    Beginning the year 1938, the East and East Central Texas district comprised 48 counties, which is equivalent to the Texas Railroad Commission districts 5 and 6. At the close of the year there were 46

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Ta-yeh Iron-Ore Deposits, Hu-pei Province, China

    By C. M. Weld

    In the course of my professional work in China during the fall of 1907, I had an opportunity to visit the iron-ore mines at Ta-yeh in Hu-pei province (long. 114O 50t E., lat. 30' 20t N.). It occu

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Baltimore Paper - A List of Minerals Containing at Least One Per Cent. of Phosphoric Acid

    By William P. Blake

    The occurrence and distribution of phosphorus is one of the most important questions with which the steel-maker has to do. Large sums are invested in processes for the removal of this element from ore

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Anthracite Mining Technology

    By J. W. Eckerd

    Anthracite mining developments have not been as spectacular as the advances made for bituminous coal. The reasons are well known, i.e., steeply pitching seams of the western, eastern, middle and south

    Jan 2, 1968

  • AIME
    Petroleum and Gas - Advances in Refining Technology during 1926

    By Charles H. Osmond

    The rapid progress of basic changes in refining processes, which has characterized this division of the petroleum industry during the last 7 years, slowed up in 1926 and the industry as a whole devote

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    The Blast-furnace Theory

    By Richard Franchot

    FERROUS metallurgy today, defined as the art of extracting money from iron ores, appears to suffer from a complex of inherited theory. In so far as pig iron costs contribute to inadequate profit margi

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Protective Resin Films on Cartridge Brass ? with Discussion on Protective Resin Films

    By H. Gisser

    Recent experimental work has demonstrated (1)2 that ammonia and oxides of nitrogen are formed during the aging of smokeless powder. This is significant in connection with the problem of "season cracki

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    The Open-hearth Steel Process as a Problem in Chemical Kinetics

    By Eric Jette

    IN order to control a chemical process by other than empirical, rule of thumb methods, two types of knowledge concerning the reactions involved must be available: (1) the thermodynamics of the reactio

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals Treatment Methods - Preparation of High-specification Sand at the Grand Coulee Dam (T. P. 715, with discussion).

    By Anthony Anable

    The definite trend to stricter specifications with respect to hydraulic concrete has become increasingly manifest in the last six years or so; but it remained for the vast reclamation projects of the

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Magnetic Beneficiation of Nonmetallics

    By Samuel Frantz

    THE purpose of this paper is to relate briefly the development of magnetic separation and its extension from the separation of iron into its present use in the nonmetallic field, to suggest possible f

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Rise and Decline in Production of Petroleum in Ohio and Indiana (with Discussion)

    By J. A. Bownocker

    The existence of petroleum in the rocks of Ohio and Indiana seems to have been first shown by wells dug for salt. The fuel, however, was objectionable owing to its odor and inflammability. Not until t

    Jan 1, 1921