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  • SME
    Chemoremediation Of Acid Mine Drainage By Controlled Ferrite Coprecipitation And Magnetic Separation

    By R. K. Mehta

    Existing acid mine drainage treatment techniques are not remedial In nature, i.e. though heavy metals can be removed from acid mine water, their presence in tailings and large quantities of these tail

    Jan 1, 1992

  • CIM
    Chemostratigraphy at the Brunswick No. 6 Volcanic-Sediment-Hosted Massive Sulfide Deposit, New Brunswick: Resolving Geometry from Drill Core in Deformed Felsic Volcanic Rocks

    By G. Roy, D. R. Lentz, A. O. Wills

    "Abstract - Diamond-drill hole DDH-B357, located 1.5 km north of the Brunswick No. 6 Zn-Pb- Cu-Ag volcanic-sediment-hosted massive sulfide (VSHMS) deposit, intersects three exhalative horizons within

    Jan 1, 2006

  • CIM
    Chemostratigraphy of Volcanic Rocks Hosting Massive Sulfide Clasts Within the Meductic Group, West-Central New Brunswick

    By L. R. Fyffe, D. R. Lentz, S. H. Mcclenaghan

    "Abstract - The Eel River area in the southwestern Miramichi terrane of New Brunswick contains a complete calc-alkaline suite of volcanic rocks that are interlayered with intervals of sedimentary and

    Jan 1, 2006

  • TMS
    Chemsheet As A Simulation Platform For Pyrometallurgical Processes

    By Pertti Koukkari, Nagendra Tripathi, Karri Penttilä, Justin Salmine

    ChemSheet is a thermodynamic multi‐phase multi‐component simulation software, which is used as an Add‐in in Microsoft Excel. In ChemSheet, the unique Constrained Gibbs free energy method can be used t

    Jan 1, 2014

  • AIME
    Chertification in the Tri-State (Oklahoma-Kansas-Missouri) Mining District

    By George Fowler

    THE history of the production of sulfur from salt domes in Louisiana and Texas originated with the operations of the Union Sulphur Co. at Sulphur, La., followed by the Freeport Sulphur Co. at Bryanmou

    Jan 1, 1934

  • NIOSH
    Chest Transmissibility Characteristics During Exposure To Single - And Combined-Axis Vibration - Introduction

    By Stephen E. Mosher, Suzanne D. Smith

    Ground, air, and water vehicles can expose humans to substantial multi-axis vibration. Multiple input/multiple output relationships or models exist for estimating frequency response functions of line

    Jan 6, 2006

  • AIME
    Chester A. Fulton, New President, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME AIME

    NATURE was in a smiling mood on December 18, 1883. On that day, Chester Alan Fulton, the sixty-first President of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, was born, and she endowe

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Chicago Discussions - Discussion of paper Prof. ?kermann (See p . 265)

    Joseph HartshoRnE, Pottstown, Pa.: I have read Professor Akerman's valuable paper with great interest. Few of the present generation of American steel metallurgists are aware of the very importan

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Chicago Discussions -Discussion of paper of Mr. Douglas (See p . 321)

    Prof. H. S. Munroe, New York City : In his reference to cop per-dressing at Lake Superior, p. 325, Mr. Douglas says that " the .. concentration .. . has been carried out with greatest financial econo

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Chicago Discussions -Discussion of paper of Mr. Keller (See p . 574)

    James W. Neill, Salt Lake City, Utah: Mr. Keller observes, in his interesting paper, that his copper mattes show a constant tenor of 21 to 23 per cent. sulphur; and continues," Many of these analy-

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Chicago Discussions -Discussion of paper of Mr. Louis (See p . 117)

    C. A. Stetefeldt, San Francisco, Cal. (communication to the Secretary): In view of Mr. Louis's statement that the balance and weights employed in his experiment were '(by no means first-rate

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Chicago Discussions -Discussion of paper of Prof. Blake (See p. 569)

    C. Q. Payne, New York City: Prof. Blake's inference that magnetic separation may be successfully employed upon smithsonite and iron oxide, after a preliminary roasting, is confirmed by the fact t

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Chicago Entertains Two Divisions

    By AIME AIME

    DOUBT in anyone's mind that this is the age of metals, industrially speaking, could easily have been dispelled by attending the National Metal Congress in Chicago, Sept. 22 to 26. Iron, copper an

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Biographical Notice of Alexander Trippel

    By R. W. Raymond

    Most of US, in this hurrying age, take little pains to preserve such records of our doings as will make the work of' our biographers easy. Now and then there is an exception, and Dr. Trippel was

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Biographical Notice of George W. Goetz

    By Nelson P. Hulst

    To those who have had the happy privilege of friendship with George W. Goetz, the announcement of his death has brought great sadness. He was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, February 17, 1855, and di

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Biographical Notice of Joseph D. Weeks

    By Alfred E. Hunt

    By the death of Joseph Dame Weeks, past-President of this Institute, which occurred December 26, 1896, the world has lost an earnest and unwearied philanthropist; the Christian church, a zealous, acti

    Jan 1, 1898

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Cooling Properties of Technical Quenching Liquids (with Discussion)

    By T. D. Lynch, N. B. Pilling

    The development of a proper treatment for shells in conncction with war contracts has brought to our attention the fact that the temperature of the liquid bath in which steel is quenched has a decided

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Determining Gases in Steel and the Deoxidation of Steel (with Discussion)

    By J. R. Cain

    In every process for making steel there are one or more stages where the metal is exposed to gas of one kind or another. Thus, in the open-hearth furnace, the carbon dioxide and water vapor in the pro

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Differential Crystallization in a Cast-steel Runner (with Discussion)

    By Francis B. Foley

    In examining steel under the microscope, one is constantly confronted with structures that are difficult to interpret. Recently, in a collection of samples for exhibition purposes, the writer found a

    Jan 1, 1920