Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Record Breaking AMC Show Proves Industry VitalitySome 30,000 people attended from 50 countries. Over 600 exhibitors brought with them a billion dollars of mining technology, ranging from tiny high-precision valves to giant off-highway trucks. Twenty
Jan 11, 1978
-
Local Section News (43d85db6-6263-41c7-bf52-76d36a9baccd)WASHINGTON, D. C. HERBERT C. HOOVER, Chairman H: FOSTER BAIN, Vice-chairman DAVID WHITE, Vice-chairman HARVEY S. MUDD, Secretary-Treasurer, Room 2114, Dept. of Interior Bldg. J. F. CALLBREATH HENN
Jan 1, 1919
-
Minerals Beneficiation - Kinetic Energy Effect in Single Particle CrushingBy B. H. Bergstram, C. L. Sollenberger
When glass spheres are crushed by slow compression loading, the outer lune-shaped fragments resulting from the fracture consistently fly outward at high velocity. About 45 pct of the strain energy fed
Jan 1, 1961
-
Institute of Metals Division - Influence of Crystallographic Order On Creep of Iron-Aluminum Solid SolutionsBy J. A. Coll, R. W. Cahn, A. Lawley
WHILE the creep properties of pure face-centered-cubic and close-packed-hexagonal metals have been thoroughly investigated and are well established, body-centered-cubic metals have been studied less e
Jan 1, 1961
-
-
Discussions - Of Mr. Campbell's Paper on The Influence of Carbon, Phosphorus, Manganese and Sulphur on the Tensile Strength of Open-Hearth Steel (see Trans., xxxv., 772)Mansfield MERRIMAN,Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa. (communication to the Secretary*):—The formulas established by Mr. Campbell require the use of tables in order to take into account the influ
Jan 1, 1906
-
Industrial Minerals - Fuel Economy in the Lepol KilnsBy R. A. Kinzie
THE major operating costs in a cement plant are labor, power, and fuel. The opportunities and methods of savings in labor and power parallel other industries. Because our industry's use of fuel i
Jan 1, 1951
-
Industrial Minerals - Fuel Economy in the Lepol KilnsBy R. A. Kinzie
THE major operating costs in a cement plant are labor, power, and fuel. The opportunities and methods of savings in labor and power parallel other industries. Because our industry's use of fuel i
Jan 1, 1951
-
Institute of Metals Division - Alloys of Copper and IronBy C. S. Smith, E. W. Palmer
IN 1934, when Gregg and Daniloffl wrote their excellent monograph on the alloys of iron and copper, the most recent literature on the constitution of the alloys indicated a narrow single-liquid area f
Jan 1, 1951
-
Iron Ore Reserves in MichiganBy Franklin G. Pardee
WARTIME depletion of the reserves of iron ore in the Lake Superior region of the grade and character now being shipped down the Lakes was serious. The time has come to take stock of the resources that
Jan 1, 1948
-
Silicide-Hardened Copper Compacts For BearingsBy E. I. Larsen, E. F. Swazy, F. R. Hensel
EXPERIENCE has indicated that hard bronzes are not suitable for bearing applications where high bearing loads and speeds are involved. It is the general practice to utilize softer materials for these
Jan 1, 1946
-
Institute of Metals Division - On the Martensitic Transformation at Temperatures Approaching Absolute ZeroBy M. Cohen, S. A. Kulin
AT a recent symposium on thermodynamics in physical metallurgy1 two opposing theories of the austenite-martensite transformation were presented. Both theories agreed that this type of reaction involve
Jan 1, 1951
-
How Cable Bolt Stabilization May Benefit Open Pit OperationsBy Ben L. Seegmiller
Localized open pit slope failure was avoided as an apparent result of a practical rock mechanics program conducted at the Twin Buttes copper operation. The key to the program was the application of ca
Jan 12, 1974
-
Papers - Some Fundamentals of the Flow and Rupture of Metals (Annual Lecture) (T.P. 1335)By George Sachs
I deeply appreciate the honor of being selected to deliver the twentieth Annual Lecture of the Institute of Metals Division. The subject of my paper is extremely involved and voluminous, therefore
Jan 1, 1941
-
Papers - Some Fundamentals of the Flow and Rupture of Metals (Annual Lecture) (T.P. 1335)By George Sachs
I deeply appreciate the honor of being selected to deliver the twentieth Annual Lecture of the Institute of Metals Division. The subject of my paper is extremely involved and voluminous, therefore
Jan 1, 1941
-
Commercial Bank Financing For The Mineral IndustriesBy Tilden Cummings
The extractive mineral industries share a number of common characteristics and basic problems which are completely different from those associated with manufacturing and mercantile operations. These i
Jan 5, 1965
-
Coal - Work of the U. S Geological Survey on Coal and Coal ReservesBy Paul Averitt
The U. S. Geological Survey has been actively engaged in work on coal for more than 50 years. During this long period we have released more than 300 publications containing information about coal and
Jan 1, 1950
-
DeceasedElected Died 1895 *ABBOTT, AI ATTHUR 1908 1882 *ABBOTT, ARTHUR V 1906 1905 * ABE, MASAYOSHI 1909 1903 * ADAMS, CHARLES C. 1905 1905 * ADAMS, WILLAMS 1909 1903 * ADAMS, W. EDWARDS 1910 1884 *A
Jan 1, 1917
-
Institute of Metals Division - Effects of Three Interstitial Solutes (Nitrogen, Oxygen and Carbon) on the Mechanical Properties of High-purity, Alpha Titanium - DiscussionBy J. A. Snyder, W. L. Finlay
G. Edmunds—Solid solubility is considered to be of either the interstitial or the substitutional type. Is it possible, in a binary alloy as the simplest case, that some of the solute atoms are present
Jan 1, 1951
-
Institute of Metals Division - Grain Growth and Subgrain Structure in Pressure-Bonded CopperBy J. W. Spretnak, G. W. Cunningham
Grain growth across the bond region in Pressure bonded copper was found to be mainly dependent upon the presence or absence of microvoids, but it was also found that prior history, bonding pressure, b
Jan 1, 1962