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  • AIME
    Computer Control Improves Metallurgy At Tennessee Copper's Flotation Plant

    By Bobby P. Faulkner

    The Tennessee Copper Co.'s flotation plant, refer- T red to as London Mill, processes approximately 4800 tons of a massive complex sulfide ore per day. The ore is predominantly pyrrhotite and pyr

    Jan 11, 1966

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Etching Aluminum and Its Alloys for Macroscopic and Microscopic Examination (with Discussion)

    By Fulton B. Flick

    The micrography and macrography of aluminum and its alloys present certain difficulties. Many of the difficulties attendant on the micrography have been removed by methods developed during the past fe

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Crystallography of Austenite Decomposition

    By Alden Greninger

    METALLURGISTS have long believed that martensite in steel forms as plates along the octahedral {111} planes of austenite. Much has been written about mechanisms whereby units of the austenite lattice

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Metasomatic Processes In Fissure-Veins

    By Waldemar Lingren

    CONTENTS. PART I.-GENERAL FEATURES. [ ]

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
    Appendix - The Origin of Metalliferous Deposits.*

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    THERE are about sixty bodies which chemists call elements ; the simplest forms of matter which they have been able to extract from the rocky crust of our earth, its waters, and its atmosphere. These s

    Jan 1, 1873

  • AIME
    Papers - Properties of the Platinum Metals, I-Strength and Annealing Characteristics of Platinum, Palladium and Several of Their Commercial Alloys (With Discussion)

    By J. T. Eash, E. M. Wise

    Platinum and palladium are the most generally useful, most ductile and least rare members of the platinum family. They have many important applications in the pure state but for other applications it

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Properties of the Platinum Metals, I-Strength and Annealing Characteristics of Platinum, Palladium and Several of Their Commercial Alloys (With Discussion)

    By J. T. Eash, E. M. Wise

    Platinum and palladium are the most generally useful, most ductile and least rare members of the platinum family. They have many important applications in the pure state but for other applications it

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Non-ferrous Metallurgy and Metallography - Twinning in Metals (Institute of Metals Annual Lecture)

    By C. H. Mathewson

    MicrOscopic metallography has been exploited quite well enough to bring about a very general understanding that the typical metal or alloy is composed of minute crystalline particles blended into a co

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Salt Lake Paper - Unit Construction Costs from the New Smelter of the Arizona Copper Co., Ltd.

    By E. Horton Jones

    CONTENTS I Page Introduction ....:......................... 3 Chapter I. Unit Costs. . ...................... 4 Chapter II. Comparative Costs ..................... 20 Chapter III. Composite Costs.

    Jan 1, 1915

  • AIME
    The Initiation of Title to Mineral Lands

    By Albert Burch

    AN analysis of this subject demands a study of the theory and practice of the present system, conclusions as to its merits, and recommendations for remedying its defects if any be found. Theory of th

    Jan 6, 1914

  • AIME
    The Effect Of Thermal-Mechanical History On The Strain Hardening Of Metals

    By A. Goldberg, T. E. Tietz, J. E. Dorn

    INTRODUCTION THE concept that the flow stress for plastic deformation of metals in the work hardening range is a function of the instantaneous values of the strain, strain rate and test temperature

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    The New Wide-angle Aerial-survey Camera

    By A. W. Furbank

    IN reviewing the aerial cameras produced in different countries, it becomes apparent that in nearly all of them an attempt has been made to secure the greatest possible angle of view. This angle, of c

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Mesabi Enters A New Era

    By Paul C. Merritt

    The story now unfolding on the Mesabi Range is more than just another chapter in the continuing history of iron mining. It is an epic of foresight, research and pioneering instinct just now culminatin

    Jan 10, 1965

  • AIME
    66. The Coeur d'Alene District, Idaho

    By Verne C. Fryklund, S. Warren Hobbs

    The Coeur d'Alene district in the panhandle of Idaho is one of the major lead-zinc-silver producing areas in the world. The value of recorded production to date has exceeded $2 billion. Country rock c

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Dry Concentration

    By Kenneth K. Humphreys, Joseph W. Leonard, Robert L. Llewellyn, William F. Lawrence

    INTRODUCTION Cleaning fine coal sizes utilizing air currents in machines as the primary separating medium is called dry concentration or pneumatic cleaning. In 1947 approximately 18 million tons (

    Jan 1, 1979

  • AIME
    Southern High-volatile Coals for Metallurgical

    By Howard Eavenson

    PRIOR to 1907 nearly all coke was made in beehive ovens, and most of the gas produced was made in the old-style gas retorts, and while there were a few coke plants in southern West Virginia, southwest

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Appendix - The Origin of Metalliferous Deposits

    By T. Sterry Hunt

    THERE are about sixty bodies which chemists call elements ; the simplest forms of matter which they have been able to extract from the rocky crust of our earth, its waters, and its atmosphere. These s

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Heterogeneity of Iron-manganese Alloys

    By C. R. Wohrman

    A melt of pure electrolytic iron with about 0.4 per cent. sulfur and 7 per cent. manganese was prepared in connection with a study of inclusions in iron. The alloy darkened rapidly when etched with a

  • AIME
    Part X - On the Determination of the Number, Size, Spacing, and Volume Fraction of Spherical Second-Phase Particles from Extraction Replicas

    By R. Ebeling, M. F. Ashby

    The paper is in two parts. The first develops the formulae and method needed to calculate the size, nu)nber, spacing, and volume fraction of hard or inert particles in the interior of a specimen from

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Officers and Directors (f465803b-4b63-4042-92ad-28e8639d2721)

    For the year ending February, 1919 PRESIDENT SIDNEY J. JENNINGS, NEW YORK, N. Y. PAST PRESIDENTS L. D. RICKETTS, NEW. YORK, N. Y. PHILIP N. MOORE, ST. Louis, Mo. FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT C. W

    Jan 2, 1919