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  • AIME
    Chattanooga Paper - The Treatment of the Gold-Ores of Hog Mountain, Alabama

    By T. H. Aldrich

    This paper is intended only to give a preliminary account of experiments made, and conclusions reached, concerning the treatment of certain refractory low-grade gold-ores, the profitable reduction of

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Mexican Paper - An Adobe Reverberatory Furnace

    By John Gross

    The building of reverberatory furnaces (Fortschaufelungsofen) where ordinary brick, fire-brick and iron are comparatively cheap, is quite a different matter from the building of such furnaces in isola

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
    Concerning The Art Of The Coppersmith.

    A GREAT labor, surely, is that of the coppersmith, since his every work must be hewn from the mass of copper by force of the hammer. At the beginning, middle, and, end all his works are inconvenient p

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Biographical Notice

    Dr. Arthur H. Elliott has been connected with the gas industry for upward of thirty-eight years and was a chemist to whom the industry is deeply indebted for the application of the science of chemistr

    Jan 7, 1918

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - Growth of Austenite in Cold-Rolled Tempered Martensite

    By A. E. Nehrenberg

    IN an earlier publication' it was shown that the.. shape assumed by a volume of growing austenite is inherited from the prior structure. The matrix grains of pearlitic microstructures are equiaxe

    Jan 1, 1953

  • AIME
    Nature Of Coal

    By J. E. Hackford

    IN SOME research. work carried out by the writer, certain results have bean obtained which bear on the fundamental nature and origin of coal and the relationship between coal and petroleum. Without en

    Jan 8, 1920

  • AIME
    Virginia State Department of Labor and Industry

    Commonwealth of Virginia, Department of Labor and Industry, Rooms 313-318, State Office bldg , Richmond, Va John Hopkins Hall, Jr., Commissioner of Labor The Department of Labor and Industry publ

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Coal-Cleaning Plant Computer System Reliability

    By J. W. Parkinson

    A coal-cleaning plant's environment can be hazardous to a computer system. The computer must be more reliable than the coal-cleaning plant mechanical processes if it is to help improve clean-coal

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    What Needs Doing in Ore Dressing ? A Briton Looks at American Technique

    By Edmund J. Pryor

    DURING the war years restrictions on travel, pressure of work, and the irregular arrival of technical literature from abroad combined to severely isolate Great Britain in a period of intense war expan

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Workwomen Great Success at a Colorado Mill

    By H. L. Tedrow

    FACED with a scarcity of labor in its operations at Alma, Colo., the London Mines and Milling Co. has been employing women for several months in its sorting and crushing plant. The results so far obta

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Mining Methods Committee Meets at Luncheon For First Time

    By Philip B. Bucky

    THE Mining Methods sessions, one of which was run jointly with the Industrial Minerals Division, were fortunate in having a number of exceptionally fine papers. At the Tuesday session R. P. Smith pre

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Of Mr. Keller's paper on the Elimination of Impurities from Copper Mattes in the Reverberatory and Converter

    In discussing Mr. Keller's paper, I quoted the results obtained by Mr. Allan Gibb, correctly crediting them to Mr. Gibb, with due reference to the report in which they were published. But in the

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Meeting Of The Board Of Directors, June 21,1918

    A meeting of the Board of Directors was held in the Council Room of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, Interior Building, Washington, D. C., on Friday, June 21, 1918, at 4 p. m. Twelve members of the Board,

    Jan 8, 1918

  • AIME
    Employment (37714681-dbae-4180-ae8d-542a0aa00f1c)

    POSITIONS VACANT Wanted, for a new smelting company now being organized in China: one man familiar with the design and operation of a zinc smelter; one experienced in the design and operation of a l

    Jan 8, 1916

  • AIME
    Los Angeles, October

    The first of the two fall meetings of the Petroleum Division was held at Los Angeles, Oct 1-2 The attendance was the largest at a Coast meeting of the Division The Institute was officially represented

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Blast Furnace Testing Of The Reclaform Process

    By Joseph S. Young

    During 1975, the Reclasource Corp. constructed and started up a plant for the recovery of mill scale, coke breeze, blast furnace dust; blast furnace sludge; and TOC dust, at the site of Crucible Steel

    Jan 1, 1977

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Preferred Orientation in Rolled and Recrystallized Beryllium - Discussion

    By C. S. Barrett, A. Smigelskas

    J. T. NORTON*—I think Mrs. Smigelskas Fischer has done a splendid job in working out the pole figures from rather difficult photograms which are common to beryllium. Is there not a mistake in Fig 2

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    The Cost Of Maintaining, Production In California Oil Fields (659702b5-41de-4d4f-81c7-506c87c62270)

    By M. E. Lombardi

    Discussion of the paper of AI. E. LOMBARDI, presented at the San Francisco meeting, September, 1915, and printed in Bulletin No. 105, September, 1915, pp. 2109 to 2114. C. D. KEEN, Shreveport, La.-Di

    Jan 12, 1915

  • AIME
    Discussion of Papers - An Investigation of the Rheological Properties of Solid-Liquid Systems

    By L. W. Pommier, L. R. Plitt, F. B. Brien

    L. R. Plitt (Assistant Professor of Mining and Metallurgy, University of Alberta, Canada.) — It is indeed encouraging to see rheological studies being carried out in a mineral engineering school. The

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Safety Measures Cut Accident Rate

    By Chas. Kohl

    ABOUT 1929 an engineer was engaged to organize a Safety Department, lay out an educational program, and achieve a reduction in accident frequency. Due to the large number of employees, about 12,000, a

    Jan 1, 1945