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  • AIME
    Part XII - Communications - Observations of the Bi Ill-IV and Bi IV-V Transitions by Resistivity Measurements

    By R. Kossowsky

    BRIDGMAN has listed five possible transitions in bismuth at 25°C which were observed as volume changes. He was unable however to detect the last three transitions by electrical-resistivity changes. Ke

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Duluth Paper - Photographing the Interior of a Coal-Mine

    By Fred P. Dewey

    IN preparing material for the exhibit of the National Museum at the New Orleans Exposition in 1881, it was decided to attempt to photograph the interior of a coal-mine, in order to get a strictly trut

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Stripping Pitching Beds In Pennsylvania's Anthracite Region

    By O. W. Shimer, D. C. Helms, C. E. Brown

    THE early history and progress of anthracite stripping, from the first known operation at Summit Hill in 1821 through 1917, was covered in 1917 in a paper by J. B. Warriner,1 then chief engineer, now

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Thermoelectric Pyrometry - Discussion (26eb00b1-16e5-4dda-abc7-56bbc4cf3970)

    J. T. LITTLETON, JR., ? Corning, N. Y. (written discussion?).-This. discussion will add little that has not been brought out but will show how the problems encountered in the Corning Glass Works were

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    Part VII - The 1966 Howe Memorial Lecture-Iron and Steel Division Vanadium in High-Speed Steel

    By George A. Roberts

    The development of an alloy system, high-speed steel, is used as an example of the progress of physical metallurgy. Tracing the history of men and their thoughts as they studied and invented and modif

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Membership (b0565f2b-7b51-4f82-b8c5-89fe888dea66)

    NEW MEMBERS The following list comprises the names of those persons Who became members during the period July 10, 1918, to Aug. 10, 1918. ARCHER, EUGENE G., assayer and Chem., Granby Cons. Min. Sm

    Jan 9, 1918

  • AIME
    Petroleum Production – United States - Review of the Appalachian Fields Including Kentucky and Tennessee

    By Jerry B. Newby

    The outstanding features in Pennsylvania and New York during the past year were the buying of acreage for water-flooding in other Pennsylyania fields than the Bradford and Allegany districts, the wide

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Salt

    By Charles H. Jacoby, Stanley J. LeFond

    Salt, or halite, has had a long and most varied history. While we know the Chinese were producing salt as early as 3000 B.C., the first written reference to salt appears in the book of Job recorded ab

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Statistics of Random Fracture

    By L. G. Austin, R. R. Klimpel

    This article demonstrates that the Gilvarry and Klimpel-Austin equations for the random fracture of solids are incorrect by deriving intuitively correct expressions for simple cases and showing that t

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - The Detection and Measurement of Fire-Damp in Mines (See Discussion, p. 725)

    By G. Chesneau

    Two great discoveries of this century have diminished the dangers of fiery coal-mines,—the sifety-lamp, conceived in 1815 by Sir Humphrey Davy and successively improved by many engineers, such as Clan

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Investigations Of - Coal-Dust Explosions

    By George Rice

    THE subject of dust explosions in coal mines first appears in the Transactions of this Institute following the first great mine disaster that happened in bituminous mines of the United States. This wa

    Jan 10, 1914

  • AIME
    Papers - Pyrophyllite Dust-Its Effect and Control (T. P. 1179)

    By M. F. Trice

    Pyrophyllite is a hydrous aluminum silicate (A1²Si4O10(OH)²)1 that, occurs in both the foliated and the massive forms. The foliated variety resembles talc in that it has a greasy feel, a pearly luster

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Papers - Pyrophyllite Dust-Its Effect and Control (T. P. 1179)

    By M. F. Trice

    Pyrophyllite is a hydrous aluminum silicate (A1²Si4O10(OH)²)1 that, occurs in both the foliated and the massive forms. The foliated variety resembles talc in that it has a greasy feel, a pearly luster

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Comparisons Between Electrolytic and Two Varieties Of Arsenical Lake Copper With Respect To Strength And Ductility In Cold-Worked And Annealed Test Strips

    By C. H. Mathewson

    CHARACTER OF THE WORK IN HAND IN planning the present experiments, we have made a particular effort to secure that adjustment of working conditions which would render the forthcoming tests most servi

    Jan 7, 1916

  • AIME
    The Genesis Of The Copper-Deposits Of Clifton.Morenci, Arizona

    By Waldemar Lindgren

    CONTENTS. [ ] THE following pages are a resun16 of some of the conclusions reached during a study of the copper-deposits near Clifton The field-work was finished in 1902 and a complete report i

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Merica Receives James Douglas Medal

    By PAUL DYER MERICA

    PAUL DYER MERICA, who has been awarded the James Douglas Gold Medal for his achievements in non-ferrous metallurgy, is a Hoosier, having been born at Warsaw, Ind., in 1889. His father, a clergyman and

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Gem Stones And Allied Materials

    By Richard H. Jahns

    Terminology and Basic Specifications Minerals and closely allied natural substances that are used for personal adornment, as raw stock for the fashioning of ornamental objects, or for other decorat

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Papers - Properties of Metals - Effect of Heat Treatment on Properties and Microstructure of Britannia Metals (With Discussion)

    By H. B. Smith, B. Egererg

    In a previous paper1 the authors dealt with the physical properties of cold-rolled and heat-treated Britannia metal of the approximate composition Sn, 91 per cent., Sb, 7 per cent. and Cu, 2 per cent.

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    New York Paper - A Development of Practical Substitutes for Platinum and Its Alloys, with Special Reference to Alloys of Tungsten and Molybdenum (with Discussion)

    By Frank Alfred Fahrenwald

    MetallURgical research has discovered many an alloy possessing properties not combined in any single metal, and progress still consists chiefly in the investigation and utilization of alloys. In the c

    Jan 1, 1916

  • AIME
    Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - Metastable Simple Cubic Phases Based on Antimony and Bismuth

    By N. J. Grant, B. C. Giessen, U. Wolff

    With the aid of the splat-cooling technique of rapid quenching, metastable alloy phases based on antimony ad bismuth have been prepared. At room temperature, simple cubic phases were found in the Sb

    Jan 1, 1969