Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization
  • AIME
    Geophysics - Geophysical Case History of the Clearwater Deposit, Northumberland County, New Brunswick, Canada

    By H. W. Fleming, R. R. Brooks

    The Clearwater Deposit, a small occurrence of massive-sulphide mineralization enclosed in an envelope of disseminated-sulphide mineralization, was discovered as a result of an aeroelectromagnetic surv

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Three-Phase Reservoir Simulation

    By E. H. Herron, J. H. Perry

    Mathematical simulation of reservoir behavior may be used to help understand reservoir processes and to predict reservoir behavior, thereby leading to the most economically desirable form of exploitat

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Open-Pit Mining Operations

    By L. E. Fish, G. S. Wyman

    CHUQUICAMATA open-pit mine is capable of producing a total of 105,000 tons daily. When the sulphide plant is operating to capacity the distribution of this quantity will be approximately 30,000 tons s

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Predicting Depletion Behavior of Condensates

    By C. F. Weinaug, R. W. Farley, J. F. Wolfe

    A rapid, accurate method for predicting the dew points of gas condensate systems and their subsequent normal and retrograde phase behavior with pressure decline has been developed. The method predicts

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Papers - - Produciton - Domestic- Oil and Gas Development in Arkansas in 1934

    By H. K. Shearer

    Drilling for oil and gas in Arkansas in 1934 showed more activity than in any year since 1929; with a total of 96 completions, including 36 oil wells, 1 gas well and 59 dry holes. Of the producers, th

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Mining - Interference Loads in Bedded Sequences

    By L. Adler

    Two basic cases involved in the design of an opening in bedded rock are: 1) where the beds deflect from each other so as to be separated; and 2) where the beds deflect onto their lower neighbor, loadi

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Mining Gilsonite in Utah

    By RUSSELL C. FLEMING

    GILSONITE is a brilliant black, tarry-like bitumen, classed technically with glance pitch and graharnite as an asphaltite. As found it is brittle, breaking much like ice, and has a conchoidal fracture

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Effects of Irradiation upon Metals

    By F. Seitz

    STAFF: Editor, Gerhard Derge Carnegie Institute of Technology Schenley Park Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Editorial Assistant, M. A. Redmerski Managing Editor, James J. Burke THE METALLURGICA

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Slovenliness (240628c2-5eff-4604-a247-d0b763cb47b1)

    By T. A. Rickard

    Slovenliness is as reprehensible in words as in clothes. Much writing that we recognize as poor in style is merely sloppy. Just as some students postpone the necessary shave or forget to change their

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Natural Gas Technology - Application of the Alternating Direction Explicit Procedure to Two-Dimensional Natural Gas Reservoirs

    By P. K. Leung, S. R. Allada, P. M. Dranchuk, D. Quon

    The alternating direction explicit procedure (ADEP) makes use of the boundary conditions to reduce multi-dimensional problems to a series of one-dimensional problems. The method, previously applied to

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Separation Efficiency

    By Norman F. Schulz

    The technical excellence of separation achieved in a mineral concentration process, or any other process where two constituents of any kind are physically separated from each other, is expressed uniqu

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    The Oil Industry in the National Economy

    By E. T. Knight, John D. Gill

    IN ITS capacity for service to the public the oil industry is truly gargantuan. But it is only in this respect that the industry is the voracious, many-headed, many-armed and many-handed creature it h

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Papers - Classification - Present Status of Ash Corrections in Coal Analysis (With Discussion)

    By A. C. Fieldner, W. A. Selvig

    For purposes of coal classification it is desirable to know the composition and calorific value of the pure coal substance; that is, of the coal free from its ash-forming minerals. Two methods suggest

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Adaptation Of Elastic-Wave Exploration To Unconsolidated Structures

    By Frank Rieber

    THE study of earthquakes long ago developed the fact that by studying the travel times of the various groups of waves from the same earthquake, as received on seismographs at varying distances, major

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Geophysics and Geochemistry - Relationship of Graphite in Soils to Graphitic Zones

    By H. Linder, W. H. Dennen

    The graphitic carbon content of soils may be used to detect and delimit subsurface graphitic zones. Spectrographic measurement of carbon in C horizon soils from several areas in the northeastern Unite

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - A Mathematical Model of Repeated Steam Soaks of Thick Gravity Drainage Reservoirs

    By G. E. Perry, R. D. Seba

    The steam soak process is the most widely applied and most successful thermal supplemental recovery process in use today. This process, which consists of injection of steam in various quantities into

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Drilling - Equipment, Methods and Materials - A Laboratory Investigation of Borehole Stability

    By H. C. H. Darley

    The principal causes of unstable boreholes* have been known for many years. For example, in a paper published in 1938, Halbouty and Kaldenbachl listed nearly all the classes of troublesome shales that

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Air Cooling In The Gold Mines On The Rand (1938)

    By Willis H. Carrier

    PARTICULAR interest in the ventilation of deep mines, especially those in South Africa, has been created by a very complete system of cooling of the world's deepest mine, the Turf shaft of the Ro

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    The Function of Alumina in Slags

    By Carl Heinrich

    I HAVE read with particular interest that portion of the discussion by Anton Eilers referring to the high-lime (and also high-alumina) slags made by August Raht in 1881, while smelting the Horn Silver

    Jan 10, 1916

  • AIME
    Further Discussion on Pressure Drawdown and Buildup in the Presence of Radial Discontinuities

    By H. K. VAN POOLLEEN, W. Hurst, H. C. Bixel

    In an earlier publication* I showed the development of the instantaneous point source solution for a well producing at a constant rate at the center of a system of two radial, adjoining sands of diffe

    Jan 1, 1969