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  • AIME
    Effect Of Time In Reheating Hardened Steel Below The Critical Range

    By C. R. Hayward

    CARLE R. HAYWARD.-I do not want it understood that I think that the conclusion that the time of tempering temperature is immaterial has been definitely proven, but since these are the first definite f

    Jan 4, 1917

  • AIME
    Mechanism of Rock Failure Under the Action of Explosives (6ae09770-a3a1-4198-a39d-2ce02d316a60)

    By Saluja, Sunder S.

    Man had to learn to break rocks as early as the Stone Age, when they formed his main source of raw material. He started with chipping and over the years has reached a stage where he can employ atomic

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Low-temperature Transformation in Iron-nickel-cobalt Alloys

    By L. L. Wyman

    THE exact nature of the changes that take place in the iron-nickel alloys, giving rise to the interesting and useful expansion alloys in the Invar range, has yet to be fully understood. Similarly, the

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    PART VI - Papers - Twinning in Beryllium Binary Alloys During Pressurization in a Solid Medium

    By R. Kossowsky

    Structural changes in Be-Cu, Be-Ni. Be - Ag, and Be-Fc alloys pressurized in a solid medium were invesligated by resistivity measurements , X-ray diffrac lion in situ and metallogvaphic examination. S

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Operations Report No. 3 – Combatting Excessive Heat Underground at Bralorne

    By W. E. Field

    In the Coast Mountains approximately 110 miles north of Vancouver, the gold mine of Bralorne- Pioneer Mines Ltd. lies at an elevation of 3500 ft. The deepest or 41 level in the mine is at an elevation

    Jan 12, 1963

  • AIME
    Papers - Carbon in Pig Iron (With Discussion)

    By William E. Brewster

    Dating back some five years ago, various foundries made inquiries as to the probable total carbon content in a given specification and grade of pig iron. Up to that time we had no data, and except for

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Papers - Carbon in Pig Iron (With Discussion)

    By William E. Brewster

    Dating back some five years ago, various foundries made inquiries as to the probable total carbon content in a given specification and grade of pig iron. Up to that time we had no data, and except for

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Papers - Copper and Brass - Causes of Cuppy Wire (With Discussion)

    By W. E. Remmers

    The defect in wire known as "cuppiness" has appeared and disappeared from time to time but the exact cause of its appearance or disappearance has not heretofore been known definitely. This defect is n

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Latest Development Of Sintering Technology

    By Yasushi Ishikawa

    The fact that the degree of granulation and the state of granulated particles of sinter raw mixtures are the influential factors in ensuring coke combustibility and permeability during sintering has b

    Jan 1, 1977

  • AIME
    Development Of A Dynamic High Pressure Triaxial Test Device

    By J. Q. Ehrgott

    INTRODUCTION The U. S. Army Engineer Waterways Experiment Station (WES), under sponsorship of the Defense Atomic Support Agency, has recently developed a unique dynamic high-pressure triaxial testi

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Enlarging Magnesium Output a Hundredfold

    By Philip D. Wilson

    SPEED is essentiaI in this war program and it is hard to keep up with developments. When the title of this paper was chosen, the contemplated magnesium production for which plants were then under cons

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Metal Mining - What's New in Mining Safety

    By S. H. Ash, J. J. Forbes

    Probably the newest thing in mining safety, or safety for mines, is the apparent dissatisfaction on the part of the mineral industries, as represented by both management and labor, and the general pub

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    This Phosphate Industry of Ours

    By Chester A. Fulton

    SUPPLYING as it does a necessity for healthy animal and vegetable phosphate production is a most important industry. We human beings also are animal as this war so surely proves. Unlike many other ele

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Alloys of Titanium with Carbon, Oxygen and Nitrogen

    By R. I. Jaffee, H. R. Ogden, D. J. Maykuth

    IN THE past year, Jaffee and Campbell' and Finlay and Snyder2 reported on the mechanical properties of titanium-base alloys, some of which were in the same ranges of composition as are covered in

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Mining Methods - Top Slicing in Old Fills at El Bordo Mine, Mexico (Discussion of paper by R. J. Mechin in Transactions 72, 1925)

    R. M. Raymond, New York, N. Y.—The filling and drawing down of the overhead material was done at considerable depth, which is not the usual method in which it starts at the surface.. R. J. Mechin.—

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    67. The Homestake Mine

    By A. L. Slaughter

    The Homestake mine, located in western South Dakota, was discovered in 1876. The first reported production was in I 878. Total production through 1965 is 6,554,249 troy ounces of silver and 27,961,276

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Washington D.C. Paper - On Chimney Draught

    By B. W. Frazier

    Jan 1, 1882

  • AIME
    Part VII – July 1968 – Communications - The Relevance of Stokes' Law to the Physical Conditions of Steelmaking

    By N. Standish

    By contrast with viscometry and sedimentation, no actual measurements of the applicability of Stokes' law to steelmaking have ever been reported; instead, the proof for and against Stokes' l

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Ground Movement and Subsidence at the United Verde Mine

    By C. E. Mills

    STUDIES of ground movement and subsidence resulting from mining operations cover a broad field. It is also a very important consideration and one that eventually affects nearly every mining operation

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Mining Geophysics

    By Hans Lundberg

    IN last year's report on the progress of geophysics, the airborne magnetometer was the featured new development. At that time only a relatively small number of surveys had been made. During 1947,

    Jan 1, 1948