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  • AIME
    The Use of Spelter for Galvanizing

    By W. R. Ingalls

    THE MAJOR use of spelter has always been for the coating of iron and steel products, the process of coating being known as "galvanizing" and the products themselves as "galvanized," except for a coupl

    Jan 7, 1923

  • AIME
    Role Of The Office Of Coal Research

    By Wayne A. McCurdy

    Seldom in history has any industry undergone such radical and rapid change as that experienced by coal. Since 1947, when bituminous coal production reached an all-time high of 631 million tons, the in

    Jan 9, 1962

  • AIME
    Chicago Engineers Inaugurate Preparedness Campaign

    A group of prominent engineers and contractors of Chicago and vicinity have cooperated in forming a Joint Committee on Military Engineering. The founders are members of all of the leading engineering

    Jan 5, 1916

  • AIME
    Coal - Air Pollution by Industrial Fumes, Gases, and Dusts

    By Louis C. McCabe

    The control of dusts and fumes of submicron size is involved in many process industries. This paper presents in tabular form the quantitative data from a number of metallurgical operations and discuss

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Factors Of Composition And Porosity In Lead-Zinc Replacements Of Metamorphosed Limestone

    By John S. Brown

    As a part of a symposium on the relations of structure to ore deposition, in February 1938, the writer presented some tentative opinions derived from his experience with a number of important lead-zin

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Coal - Air Pollution by Industrial Fumes, Gases, and Dusts

    By Louis C. McCabe

    The control of dusts and fumes of submicron size is involved in many process industries. This paper presents in tabular form the quantitative data from a number of metallurgical operations and discuss

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Self-Diffusion of Iron in Nickel Ferrite (TN)

    By C. E. Birchenall, R. H. Condit, M. J. Brabers

    In the oxidation of pure iron above 700°C the overall rate is determined mainly by the rapid growth of wiistite, through which iron ions can diffuse rapidly.' Nickel added to the iron progressive

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Petroleum and Gas in the Rocky Mountain District, 1932

    By C. D. Johnson

    Exploration work in 1932 in the Rocky Mountain region, which includes the states of Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico, resulted in the discovery of one new oil field, Cut Bank in Glacier

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Transactions For 1918

    Volumes 57 and 58 of the Transactions were mailed together during the third week of August to all members whose dues for 1918 had been paid on Aug. 1. Any member whose copies fail to reach him within

    Jan 9, 1918

  • AIME
    Technical Note - Uranium Recovery From A Nuclear Fuel Waste Form

    By J. E. Flinn, J. M. Welch, R. L. Miller

    Introduction Two samples of an iron-enriched basalt (IEB)-a silicate-based fused-cast ceramic waste form-containing components that simulate Three Mile Island Unit 2 core debris were tested for ura

    Jan 1, 1986

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Stabilization of Austenite by Cyclic Martensitic Transformations (TN)

    By George Krauss, Morris Cohen

    NUMEROUS investigators1-4 have shown that one of the most conspicuous effects of the reverse marten-sitic transformation in Fe-Ni alloys is the stabilization of the austenite which forms on reversal.

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - Isothermal Temper Embrittlement and the Effect of Hardness on Transition Temperature

    By B. C. Woodfine

    WHEREAS it is generally assumed that the highest temperature at which temper brittle-ness takes place is about 625°C, 1,2,3 Jaffe, Buffum, and coworkers have referred in several recent papers45,6,7 to

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Starches and Starch Products as Depressants in Amine Flotation of Iron Ore

    By S. R. B. Cooke, R. O. Huch, C. S. Chang

    IN the flotation of iron ores laurylamine derivatives have been used for considerable time.1, 2' To effect satisfactory separation of the gangue, pre-dominantly silica, from the iron oxide minera

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    Birmingham Paper - Note on the Iron-Ores, Fuels and Improved Blast-Furnace Practice of the Birmingham District

    By Alfred F. Brainerd

    The subject of the supply and the quality of the iron-ore and coke of this State has suffered exaggeration and misrepresentation in both directions. Unsophisticated persons have made extraordinary rep

    Jan 1, 1889

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Tunnel Driving at Copper Mountain, B. C.

    By Oscar Lachmund

    During the driving of the main haulage level at the Copper Mountain mines of the Canada Copper Corpn., Ltd., near Princeton, B. C., some very rapid driving was done, though no claim for a world's

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Papers - Health and Safety in Mines - Diagnosis of Silicosis (Abstract)

    By Adelaide Ross Smith

    Both history and physical examination are unreliable in the diagnosis of silicosis. In some studies 25 per cent of individuals with silicosis have been found to have no symptoms whatever. The posit

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Use Of Laser Guidance Systems For Large Haulage Trucks

    By S. Jess Larsen

    Modern technology has provided the world with many innovations to improve living standards, ease of job performance, efficiency, and managerial control. While not expected to compete with the computer

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    The Determination of Antimony in the Products Obtained by Roasting Stibnite

    By William Hall

    THE product obtained by roasting stibnite is likely to contain some unoxidized antimony trisulphide and a mixture of antimony trioxide and antimony tetroxide. It was desired to determine, as accuratel

    Jan 1, 1916

  • AIME
    Modern Methods Of Mining And Ventilating Thick Pitching Beds

    By H. M. Crankshaw

    THE early methods of mining anthracite in the steep pitching Mammoth bed consisted in driving breasts up the pitch from the gangways and airways driven in the bed along the strike (Plate 2, Fig. 1). B

    Jan 7, 1916

  • AIME
    The Influence Of Stress Level On The Creep Of Unfilled Rock Joints

    By Charles W. Schwartz, Subash Kolluru

    INTRODUCTION Creep of rock in situ, like most rock mass behavior, will be largely governed by the behavior of the natural discontinuities -- bedding planes, faults, and joints, in particular, Sever

    Jan 1, 1982