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  • AIME
    A Study Of Coal Classification And Its Application To The Coking Properties Of Coal

    By Michael Perch

    The fact that coal is a complex organic material and heterogeneous in composition has made its study extremely difficult, particularly in regard to obtaining a fundamental concept of the processes inv

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Lightweight Aggregate Industry in Oregon

    By N. S. Wagner

    The production of lightweight aggregates in Oregon is a new industry, and, like all new enterprises, it is suffering from growing pains characterized by numerous, small operations some of which flouri

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Titanium Investigations: The Laboratory Development of Mineral-dressing Methods for Arkansas Rutile

    By H. Kenworthy, M. M. Fine

    The progress made to date in the mineral dressing of complex Arkansas titanium ores is reported in this paper. Concentrates of rutile, a dioxide of titanium, were produced by treating a submarginal or

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Coal Industry

    By CLAYTON C. BALL

    In the year 1948, more than ever before, the coal industry established itself on the threshold of a new and exciting future expansion. While production did not equal the wartime and peacetime peaks of

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Trackless Mining Proposed For Pitching Coal Seam

    By H. C. LIVINGSTON

    At the Hanna No. 4-A mine of The Union Pacific Coal Co. a new system of trackless mining is being utilized to extract a 26-ft coal seam. By using shuttle cars and a conveyor belt for haulage in the ro

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Mechanization at the Bureau of Mines Oil-shale Mine

    By E. D. Gardner

    The Synthetic Liquid Fuels Act (58 Stat., 190; 30 U.S.C. Sup., Secs. 321- 325) was approved by Congress April 5, 1944; it directed the Bureau of Mines to build demonstration plants to produce syntheti

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Coal Washing in Colorado and New Mexico

    By J. D. Price, W. M. Bertholf

    In preparing a paper on coal washing in Colorado and New Mexico, it is difficult to refrain from entering into a discussion of the historical aspects of this subject, for the story of coal washing in

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Operational Statistics Of A Marion 5560 Power Shovel

    By George B. Clark

    COMMERCIAL strip mining of coal was first begun in the state of Illinois in 1911.1 The annual tonnage of coal produced from coal strip mines in the state was very small until 1924, when the strip mine

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Economics of Coal for West Coast Power Generation

    By Claude P. Heiner

    While the title of this paper embraces the entire West Coast, the author, in the interest of simplification. has confined the discussion to California-particularly the central section. California&apo

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Municipal-water Needs vs. Strip Coal Mining

    By Gregory M. Dexter

    Recent litigation in Pennsylvania between three coal-mining companies and a private water company resulted in the payment by the coal companies of the equivalent of about $500,000 to buy a new water s

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    A Technical Study Of Coal Drying

    By G. A. Vissac

    MOISTURE in coal must be considered as an impurity, just the same as ash, from the standpoint of utilization of the coal. Being incombustible, it reduces directly the heating value of the coal, and in

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    What Graduates Expect Of The Coal Industry

    By William N. Poundstone

    What attracts young engineering graduates into the coal industry? What do these young men expect of a career in coal mining? These questions are often asked and debated by mining men throughout the co

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Forum On Open Pit Mining - Tungsten Carbide Bits for Blockholing at Ajo

    By ALFRED T. BARR

    In certain areas of the New Cornelia pit, considerable secondary blasting is necessary to reduce oversized boulders, formed from primary blasting, to pieces which will pass the 41/2-cu yd dippers on t

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    New York Talcs, Their Geological Features, Mining, Milling, and Uses

    By E. J. ENGEL

    The New York talc deposits of commercial importance are in St. Lawrence and Lewis counties, in the northwest Adirondack Mountains (Fig 1). All of the deposits are of pre-Cambrian age and occur within

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Coal Washing In Washington, Oregon, And Alaska

    By M. R. Geer

    Coal washing assumed an important role in the mining industry of the Pacific Northwest long before washing practice became firmly established in the Appalachian field. A Scaife washer was operated in

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Chromite

    By W. D. Johnston, T. P. Thayer

    THE minerals that collectively are known as chromite form an isomorphous series of the general formula (Mg,Fe) 0. (Cr,Al,Fe) 203. So wide is the range in chemical composition in this group that chrome

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Drying Low-rank Coals in the Entrained and Fluidized State

    By V. F. Parry, J. B. Goodman

    The low-rank coals containing 10 to 50 pet natural bed moisture represent over half of the tonnage reserve of the available solid fuels of the United States, but only about 2 pet of United States coal

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Stock Piling - Past, Present, And Future

    By Richard J. Lund

    Stock piling-and by that I mean well-organized stock piling on a substantial scale-is almost as old as the hills themselves. It was back in early Biblical times, as recounted in the Book of Genesis, t

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Mining, Milling, And Processing Of Perlite

    By Fred D. Gustafson

    With the postwar emergency for new housing and for new industrial buildings, much research has been done on lightweight aggregates for use in concrete and plaster. The trend toward lighter weight aggr

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Flotation Of Quartz Using Calcium Ion As Activator

    By Strathmore R. B. Cooke

    On the basis of experiments con- ducted on quartz using a bubble pick-up method, it was shown in an earlier paper1 that this mineral will preferentially adsorb hydrogen, calcium, or sodium ions, depen

    Jan 1, 1949