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  • AIME
    A-C vs. D-C in Continuous Mining

    By J. R. Guard

    Development of electrical power in coal mining has been an outstanding example of adaptability. It has accommodated itself to new inventions, changing mining methods, increasing demands, increasing sa

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Human Resourcefulness Key To Mineral Supplies

    By Max W. Ball

    Our ever-increasing use of minerals has been the outstanding fact in our American economic development. The rise in our standard of living in the past century is without equal in human history. Nowher

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Aluminum Production

    By Philip D. Wilson

    AS thin most important and vital component of an airplane aluminum hay rapidly become the heart and tome- of the war program. Its production ham increased amt will continue to increase, in comparison

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Rare Metals and Minerals

    By Zay Jeffries

    HOSTILITIES in Europe, Asia, and northern Africa were responsible for dislocations in rare-metal supplies during 1940. Although the consumption of some of the rare metals is small the dislocations may

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Modern Methods in Petroleum Geology

    By Frederick G. Tickell

    GEOLOGISTS have been quick to adopt new methods in locating new oil fields and in finding the extensions, laterally or at depth, of the old fields. For most of these new methods he is indebted to the

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Illinois in 1944

    By Alfred H. Bell, Virginia Kline

    In 1944, Illinois produced 77,413,000 bbl. of oil, or 4.6 per cent of the total for the United States, and continued to rank sixth in the nation in oil production. This represents a decrease of 6 per

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Electrical and Metallurgical Improvements At Kennecott's Utah Copper Division Mills

    By R. J. Corfield

    MODERNIZATION of the entire electrical system and improvement of Rotation process efficiency is the twofold goal of the improvement program underway at the Arthur and Magna concentrators of the Utah C

    Jan 3, 1953

  • AIME
    Biographical Notice Of Thomas Septimus Austin.

    By Arthur S. Dwight

    THE professional career of Thomas Septimus Austin, who died at El Paso, Tex., August 23, 1906, was contemporaneous with the growth of the silver-lead smelting-industry of the Far West, to which his ta

    Jan 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Table of Contents (9456f6db-4651-4b3e-a139-694364dd8abd)

    CURRENT MATTERS Page Page New York Meeting v Federal Control of Minerals xxxii Meeting of Board of Directors.. ix Naval Consulting Board...' xxxix Reports for Year, 1917: Perkin Medal xl

    Jan 2, 1918

  • AIME
    Production Engineering Becoming Increasingly Efficient

    By A. W. WALKER

    All branches of production engineering showed steady and definite progress during 1941. Most of it has been of the slower and more conservative type rather than the sensational. To a large degree the

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Southern Research Institute ? New Commercial Laboratories To Have Headquarters at Birmingham

    By Milton H. Fies

    EARLY in 1945 the laboratories of the Southern Research Institute will begin active research investigations on behalf of industrial clients. This achievement has come after four years of planning by a

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Zinc Metallurgists Perfect Recent Developments

    By Frank G. Breyer

    C ONDITIONS have not been favorable for new developments in any line. It has been a period, how- ever in which recent developments have been subjected to the severest tests. Those which have been able

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Washington Survey - Morton Favors Resources Department

    Bill S.1431 for the creation of a Department of Natural Resources has received a propitious hearing before the Senate Committee on Government Operations. Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton was one

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Problems of Mineral Surplus

    By C. K. Leith

    THE outstanding fact of the mineral world today, at home and abroad, is the surplus of current production, and particularly of capacity for production, over current requirements. This is not by Any me

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Reorganization of the Federal Government

    By Herbert Hoover

    THERE is one problem of the new administration that has received the attention and thought of the organized engineers of America for many years past. This is the problem of the reorganization of the F

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Log Washers in the Aggregate and Flux-stone Industries

    By A. R. Jr. Amos

    LOG washers have been used for many years in the washing of clay iron ores, phosphate rock and manganese ores, but not until the past 15 years have they been employed to any extent in the preparation

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Log Washers in the Aggregate and Flux-stone Industries (0877ecc9-4f5e-45ee-baad-2bba4a29dcf4)

    By A. R. Jr. Amos

    LOG washers have been used for many years in the washing of clay iron ores, phosphate rock and manganese ores, but not until the past 15 years have they been employed to any extent in the preparation

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Exploration Extends Magma's Future

    By Russell Webster

    In having maintained production for more than 40 years Arizona's Magma mine is unique in a mineral district that includes several major copper mines. Other past and present producers in this area

    Jan 10, 1958

  • AIME
    Increasing Responsibility of the Engineer in Public Life

    By Mark Eisner

    ONE'S JOB is the watershed down which the rest of one's life tends to flow write the Lynds in the first pages of their classic social study, "Middletown in Transition." Certainly engineers w

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Increasing Assay Furnace Capacity by Larger Muffles

    By Joseph T. Roy

    MINING revival during the last few years has brought about a considerable increase in the number of gold and silver determinations made, noticeable in all branches of the industry but especially so in

    Jan 1, 1938