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  • AIME
    A Homemade Portable Assay Furnace

    By James P. Sloss

    A PERMANENT assay office is commonly established as part of the general plant equipment of operating gold and silver properties, but during the development stage of a mine, the cost of such an office

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Arizona's Copper Province And The Texas Lineament

    By Jacques B. Wertz

    Both the San Andreas fault complex and the Murray fracture zone are apparently found to be contemporaneous with the Laramide mineralization period. Their compounding effects certainly have disturbed t

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Production of High-Density Parts by Powder Metallurgy Increases

    By Charles Hardy, George D. Cremer

    POWDER metallurgy has been established for some time as a novel method for manufacturing a great variety of articles generally specialties that could not be made conveniently by any other method. In t

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    John Fritz Medal Presented to Herbert Hoover

    By AIME AIME

    THE John Fritz Gold Medal for 1929 was presented to Herbert Hoover at the Executive Mansion on April 25, at a luncheon given by Mr. Hoover to present and past members of the Board of Award, preceding

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Microstructure of Iron-Sulfur Alloys

    By Lawrence H. Van Vlack, Alfred S. Keh

    The distribution of sulfur in iron was found to be dependent upon the time and temperature of the treatment as well as the chemical composition of the sulfide. With higher temperatures, the sulfide ph

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Development Program in a Part of the Ventura Avenue Oil Field

    By Joseph Jensen

    MANY fields have been zoned by nature with shales and intermediate waters between oil zones. Limitations thus imposed have been the basis on which the field was developed. In contrast thereto, in the

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Mineral Economics - U. S. Share of World Metal Output Declines in Last Decade

    By Arthur Notmon

    WORLD production of the three major nonferrous metals, copper, lead, and zinc, in 1939 will aggregate about 6,050;000 tons, compared with the all-time peak of 6,237,944 tons in 1937, and the previous

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    The One Hundred and Twenty-third Meeting of the Institute

    By AIME AIME

    THE 123d meeting of the Institute was held in New York Feb. 14 to 17, 1921. The total registration was 1199, as compared with 1138 at the New York meeting in 1920. The weather was a strange and welco

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    A Simple Method for Making Stereoscopic Photographs and Micrographs

    By Louis Moyd

    In the preparation of illustrations to accompany reports of investigations concerning particle shapes of various natural and manufactured materials proposed for use as fine aggretates in concrete stru

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Aviation - Aerial Geologizing Most Important of Applications to Mining Industry

    By Theodore Marvin

    FOLLOWING the receipt of questionnaires from many parts of the world, the Aviation Committee is completing a review of the use of aviation in mining and petroleum operations. The summary of this study

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Report Of Committee On Uniform Mining Laws For Prevention Of Mine Accidents.

    By AIME AIME

    TO THE AMERICAN MINING CONGRESS. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OE MINING ENGINEERS. MINING AND METALLURGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA. The committee that makes this report was appointed at the meeting of the Americ

    Jan 10, 1910

  • AIME
    Metallurgy of Copper - Insulation and Suspended Roofs for Reverberatories - An Arc Melting Furnace Installed

    By E. W. Rouse

    THE year 1936 has seen rehabilitation of many plants which had been closed or severely curtailed. The Steptoe smelter of the Nevada Consolidated Copper Co. has been transformed by a rearrangement of t

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Tin Deposits of Mexico

    By FREDERICK MCAKCCOY

    THE production of tin from Mexico has never reached the point of being considered a national industry, but the distribution of tin ores is so widespread that there are possibilities that one day it ma

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Vertical Fracture Height – Its Effect on Steady-State Production Increase

    By W. T. Malone, J. R. Williams, R. L. Tiner, J. M. Tinsley

    Hydraulic fracturing methods for production stimulation have become a common procedure in the oil and gas industry. Fracturing treatments are performed on wells of various potentials to help increase

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Present Condition of the Mining Industry

    By H. Foster Bain

    THERE has never been a great civilized nation which did not have a mining industry; civilization cannot flourish without metal mining. Without tools we can have none of the 'industries that are t

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Getting The Foreign Workman's Viewpoint

    By Prince Lazarovich, Hrebelianovich

    I WAS asked by the chairman of one of the Sessions on Employment Problems to talk about the viewpoint of the foreign workingman. I am not a workingman. I have never done what a work-hand might call an

    Jan 4, 1918

  • AIME
    John Fritz Medal to Cross the Ocean

    By AIME AIME

    THE John Fritz Medal Board of Award, at its annual meeting on Jan. 21, 1921, awarded its gold medal and diploma to Sir Robert Hadfield for the invention of manganese steel. On June 1, announcement was

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Iron Ore Mining on Red Mountain, Alabama

    By TENNEY C. DeSOLLAR

    TRADITION tells us that the earliest use of Alabama iron was to make shoes for the horses of General Andrew Jackson and his men during the first part of the nineteenth century. The first recorded inci

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Mining Geology ? Use of Geology in Search for Ore Increasing Over a Wide Front

    By GEO M. FOWLER

    AN appraisal of the activities of the mining geologists during 1936 clearly indicates the ever in- creasing utilization of geology in the search for ore. Few men with geo- logic training are idle at p

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Research in the Steel Industry

    By John A. Mathews

    RESEARCH in the steel industry, as in other lines of manufacturing, has for its principal purpose the increasing of profits. That is what manufacturing companies are for, and all departments of the or

    Jan 1, 1921