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  • AIME
    Cities Service Company - Pinto Valley Project - Miami, Arizona

    The Pinto Valley, Arizona, plant of Cities Service Company is one of the newest copper producers in the United States, having started production in 1975. It is located a few miles west of Miami, Arizo

    Jan 1, 1978

  • AIME
    Wildcat Drilling in Wyoming

    By E. G. SINCLAIR

    DRILLING wildcat wells in Wyoming differs a little from methods used in any other field. Here it is always advisable to start the hole as large as is convenient in order to carry each string of pipe a

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Papers - Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Developments in West Virginia during 1937

    By David B. Reger

    Extensive drilling for gas and increased pipe-line building were the major petroleum activities in West Virginia during 1937. According to the West Virginia Department of Mines, 1034 permits to drill

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Part VIII - The Yield-Point Phenomenon in Strain-Aged Martensite

    By N. N. Breyer

    A specially built "hard" tensile machine with characteristics permitting the precise detertnination of the drop of the load at the yield point has been used to study the magnitude of the yield-point p

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Developments in Fatigue, Creep, Age-hardening, Diffusion, Microscopy, Borocarbides, Powders, Electrodeposition, and Die Castings

    By Frances H. Clark

    IN wartime, the fabrication and use of metals assumes increased importance, for a modern war of sizable proportions cannot be undertaken with- out a vast supply of this material. Light alloys of alumi

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Better fragmentation Claimed for Fat-Delay Caps

    By D. M. McFarland

    IN mining, quarrying, and construction, drilling and blasting have an important influence on the operations that follow. If the fragmentation of material being disrupted is inadequate, loading and tra

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Some Suggestions Concerning Ore Genesis

    By Grimes, J. A.

    EXTENSIVE discovery 'and rapid exploitation of orebodies within the past half century have attracted many able geologists to the mining industry and furnished them a wealth of data from which to

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    A Reliable Steel Rail and How to Make It

    By James E. York

    AT a meeting of the American Society for Testing Materials at Atlantic City, June, 1908, Dr.. C. B. Dudley, in his presidential address,' showed the vital necessity of not only making a steel rai

    May 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Progress in Mining Methods During 1931

    By Scott Turner

    AS IN OTHER lines of engineering, progress in mining was influenced during 1931 by the world-wide economic depression. Low-metal prices ? resulted in active efforts to reduce production costs of base-

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Development and Operation of the Mine

    By Layson, W. C.

    ACCORDING to the records, Phelps Dodge made its original entry into the production of copper in the oldest copper mines of Arizona at Morenci in 1881. The ore body now being mined as the Morenci open-

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Will Our Aluminum Plants Be Postwar White Elephants?

    By AIME AIME

    BY the end of 1943, the United States will be able to produce aluminum at a rate of 1,150,000 tons a year. How much aluminum is 1,150,000 tons? It is sufficient to replace every railroad passenger car

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Ingot Structure And Segregation

    IN THE early period of steelmaking, ingot structure and segregation presented no difficult problems. Crucible melting required very small ingots which, if properly deoxidized, gave little segregation,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    The Influence Of The Movement Of Shales On The Area Of Oil Production

    By R. A. Conkling

    DORSET HAGER, Tulsa, Okla. Recently we have, been doing a little work along the same lines Mr. Conkling has outlined iii his paper. I am not prepared to say that Mr. Conkling is not correct but our re

    Jan 4, 1917

  • AIME
    Fluorspar and Its Uses

    By E. L. BROKENSHIRE

    FLUORSPAR, a little known non-metallic mineral, referred to technically as fluorite, chemically as calcium fluoride, is a compound of calcium and fluorine in the ratio of one molecule of calcium to tw

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Rope Idlers In The Raven Shaft

    By George Packard

    THE shaft of the Raven. mine, at Butte, Mont., is an incline 1,700 ft. in length and dipping at various angles. At the top the dip is 70° from the horizontal, but this is gradually flattened until at

    Jan 8, 1914

  • AIME
    Water Flooding in Northeastern Oklahoma

    By Wllliam D. Davis

    C OMMERCIAL production of oil in northeastern Oklahoma began in 1897 and in the next two decades this area became one of the greatest oil districts of the time. Its importance is now secondary, but th

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Use of Oxygenated Air in the Iron Blast Furnace

    By Charles Hart

    THE-report of the advisory committee to the U. S. Bureau of Mines, on the use of oxygen in metallurgy, brings to the art of steelmaking a radical change in the method of operation of the many processe

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Recent Geologic Developments on the Mesabi Iron Range, Minnesota (798cea97-e35d-4347-8e8f-e40b382b536b)

    By J. F. Wolff

    J. G. WOLFF, Duluth, Minn. (communication to the Secretary*).-In raising the question (" Newly Discovered Fossil Remains in the Cretaceous Shale," p. 1784) as to the possibility of the so-called Creta

    Jan 2, 1917

  • AIME
    Part IX – September 1969 – Communications - Deformation of Be-Cu Single Crystal Under High Pressure

    By J. E. Hanafee, G. J. London

    MANY studies of the deformation behavior of materials under a superimposed hydrostatic pressure have shown that materials brittle at ambient pressure behave in a ductile manner under pressure. Thus, w

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    The Influence of Carbon, Phosphorus, Manganese and Sulphur on the Tensile Strength of Open-Hearth Steel

    By H. H. Campbell

    MANY attempts have been made to write a formula by which to calculate the strength of steel from its chemical composition, but most of these endeavors have failed because there were too many disturbin

    Jan 1, 1905