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  • AIME
    Problems of American Railroads Early in 1936

    By J. J. Pelley

    NOT being a scientist, an engineer or a metallurgist, I consider it a very great honor indeed to be asked to address the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. Your program indicate

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Production - Foreign - Russian Oil Fields in 1930-1931 (With Discussion)

    By Robert C. Beckstorm

    Russia produced over one-half of the world's petroleum in 1901. It dropped to a low figure in 1920 during the reorganization of the new government. Since then it has had a remarkable growth under

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    New York - Philadelphia Paper - Specifications for Steel Forgings and Steel Castings (Discussion p. 1042)

    By William R. Webster

    In view of the good results which have followed the wide discussion of the rail-specifications of the American Section of the International Association for Testing Materials, I now offer for discussio

    Jan 1, 1903

  • AIME
    Mental Factors In Industrial Organization

    By Thomas Read

    READJUSTMENT Of the industrial world to a peace .basis after more than 4 years of war will involve many fundamental and far-reaching changes that cannot as yet he clearly foreseen or definitely provid

    Jan 2, 1919

  • AIME
    Metals And Alloys From A Colloid-Chemical Viewpoint

    By Jerome Alexander

    IT is an outstanding fact of Nature that many of the practical properties of substances are dependent, not on their ultimate chemical composition, but on the kind and degree of aggregation of their co

    Jan 2, 1919

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas in Michigan during 1938

    By Theron Wasson

    Michigan reports another record year. Its production of 18,605,000 bbl. exceeds any previous year's total and is 2,000,000 bbl. over 1937, the previous record year. Production in 1938 brings the

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Canadian Oil Reserves

    By Walter A. English, Ralph Arnold

    Though production began in Canada only a short time after the discovery of oil in the United States, it has never attained large proportions, and if we were to judge entirely by the past the reserves

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    The Oil Fields Of Mexico (9233b393-693e-4c27-8a2d-26822b97bad0)

    By Ezequiel Ordonez

    I HAVE read ill the Bulletin (May, '1914) a paper by H. von Höfer relating to the Origin of Petroleum, in which the author supports his and Engler's views, expressed before, of the organic o

    Jan 10, 1914

  • AIME
    St. Louis Paper - On the Condition of Carbon in Gray and White Iron

    By Thomas M. Drown

    I DESIRE to communicate to the Institute the results of a few analyses which bear on the condition of carbon in gray and white iron. These analyses were made in the course of an investigation, now in

  • AIME
    The Method Of Making Common Parting Acid.

    IF you wish to make the acid that is vulgarly called common aqua fortis,* for parting gold from silver, you must first provide as many cucurbits and alembics, receivers, and materials as you wish, and

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Petroleum Resources Of Great Britain

    By A. C. Veatch

    THE MIDLANDS of England contain large areas of important oil lands, which, however, will not become of commercial importance for at least 5 years, because the ownership of the oil has become a politic

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Butte Paper - Lead-Silver Mines of Gilmour, Lemhi County, Idaho

    By Ralph Nichols

    The mines are near the town of Gilmore, in the Texas mining district. This district was organized in 1880. The present producing mines are near the terminus of the Gilmore & Pittsburg railroad. This r

    Jan 1, 1914

  • AIME
    Part V – May 1968 - Papers - Near-Equilibrium Kinetics of the Dissociation of Cupric Oxide

    By M. A. Rigdon, R. E. Grace

    The dissociation of cupric oxide to cuprous oxide and oxygen was studied with a microbalmce technique at 700" to 750°C. In this temperature range the dissociation pressure of the reaction 2CuO= Cu2O

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Water Troubles In The Mid-Continent Oil Fields And Their Remedies -Discussion

    I. N. KNAPP, Ardmore, Pa. (written discussion *).-The writer would first call attention to the fact that the mid-Continent field was credited from 1900 to 1915 with a production of about 641,000,000 b

    Jan 5, 1919

  • AIME
    Extractive Mettallurgy Division - Thermodynamics of the Cu-Fe-S System at Matte Smelting Temperatures

    By W. A. Krivsky, R. Schuhmann

    PREVIOUS papers in this series on the thermo-•t dynamics of copper-smelting systems have presented a survey of the field and an outline of the overall program: thermodynamic studies of iron silicate s

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    Unit Operation of Oil Pool - Cooperation between Engineers and Lawyers

    By Peter Q. Nyce

    Law is as old as civilization. In its early stages the so-called law of the jungle, "the survival of the fittest," was entirely operative. Man was quite largely a law unto himself and was likewise his

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Some Physical Aspects Of The Silicosis Problem (e52743ca-8339-412b-8842-9a589914bac8)

    By A. J. Lanza

    IN view of the immense amount of attention that silicosis has received in this country in the past few years, it is timely to review the status of the silicosis problem at present. Who gets silicosi

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Application Of Hindered Settling To Hydraulic Classifiers.

    By Earl Bardwell

    IN his paper entitled, Development of Hindered-Settling Apparatus, Dr. Richards has related the history of the development of the hindered-settling classifier and given illustrations of the several ty

    Jan 8, 1913

  • AIME
    New York Paper February, 1918 - Heating of Coal in Piles

    By C. M. Young

    Bituminous coal piled in heaps or bins frequently undergoes a process of spontaneous heating as the result of the absorption of oxygen. It seems probable that the first absorption of oxygen by coal wh

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    Papers - Tensile Deformation of Critically Oriented Brass Crystals (T. P. 1149)

    By H. l. Burghoff

    During the course of preparation of crystals of alpha brass for an investigation of their creep characteristics, a number of critically oriented crystals were produced. In each of these specimens, Po,

    Jan 1, 1940