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  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Contract Wage System for Mines (with Discussion)

    By A. K. Knickerbocker

    Practically all underground work on the Minnesota iron ranges is done by miners working on a so-called contract wage system. This system, while it has certain advantages over the straight day's p

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Economy of Electricity over Steam for Power Purposes in and about Mines

    By R. E. Hobart

    THE development of the Hauto power plant and the claims made by various engineers that electricity was more economical than steam for power purposes in and about the mines; led the Lehigh Coal and Nav

    Jan 2, 1918

  • AIME
    Reports On Technological Research - Clues To Ore Deposits In Southeast Arizona Domes And Fracture Intersections

    By Jacques B. Wertz

    Even with the best geological maps, there is a constant need for further information and a constant demand for new clues, particularly in exploration work. New ideas and new thoughts are a necessity f

    Jan 6, 1969

  • AIME
    The Determination Of Oxide Lead In Ores And Concentrator Products

    By H. L. Talbot, R. S. Young, A. Golledge

    THE differentiation of, oxidized forms of lead from lead sulphide in complex products by chemical analysis is of considerable importance to certain mining and metallurgical companies. A method for the

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    An Aerial Tramway For Mining Cliff Coal

    By Arthur Gibson

    Synopsis.-A new feature in coal mining, where the coal is to be conveyed from a high to a lower elevation and the topography of the country is such as to preclude surface haulage. The distance from t

    Jan 10, 1914

  • AIME
    Salt Lake City Paper - Flotation and Lead Smelting: The Blast Furnace

    By R. A. Wagstaff

    Many changes in equipment have had to be made to handle the flotation products at the blast furnace, and these changes have meant an expenditure of considerable money, which has not been compensated b

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Flotation And Lead Smelting: The Blast Furnace

    By R. A. Wagstaff

    MANY changes in equipment have had to be made to handle the flotation products at the blast furnace, and these changes have meant an expenditure of considerable money, which has not been compensated b

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Why Use Centrifuges for Dewatering Yellow Cake?

    By Robert F. Brindisi

    There are approximately thirty to forty operating mills in the United States which are currently producing uranium yellow cake. This figure includes a significant number of in situ and by-product oper

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Absolute Reaction Rate Theory For Diffusion In Metals

    By D. Turnbull, J. H. Hollomon, J. C. Fisher

    UNDERSTANDING of the diffusion problem has recently been furthered by the analysis of Birchenall and Mehl.1 They pursued the problem of the variation of the diffusion coefficient with composition for

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    The Use Of The Jominy Test In Studying Commercial Age-Hardening Aluminum Alloys

    By William H. Baer, George M. Carlton, Blake M. Loring

    IT is a well known fact that age-hardening alloys remain in a supersaturated, or partially supersaturated, condition only for limited periods of time at temperatures below the solvus. In order to deve

    Jan 1, 1948

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

    By H. Kenworthy, R. B. Fisher, R. G. Knicherbocker, 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, 1950

  • AIME
    Platinum in the Urals

    By R. S. Botsford

    SPECULATION as to when and under what conditions mining may be resumed in Russia by foreign interests is becoming more interesting. Circumstances have changed so completely that all new projects must

    Jan 12, 1923

  • AIME
    World War II And Its Aftermath

    By Robert Glass Cleland

    THE OUTBREAK of World War II found Phelps Dodge, thanks to both foresight and good fortune, in a position to increase production of its mines and factories to meet the insatiable military and domestic

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Coal Mining - Pure Coal as a Basis for Classification (with Discussion)

    By R. V. Wheeler, F. V. Tideswell

    The suggestion, which appears to find increasing favor, that the elementary composition of coals should be used as the basis of their classification, makes it important that our methods of expressing

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering-General - A New Depletion-Performance Correlation for Gas-Condensate Reservoir Fluids

    By B. A. Eaton, R. H. Jacoby

    This paper presents the depletion-performance correlations developed using data from PVT studies and well-completion tests of 27 rich gas-condensate and volatile-oil reservoir fluids. The PVT behavior

    Jan 1, 1966

  • AIME
    Flotation Of Kaolinite For Removal Of Quartz

    By Herbert H. Kellogg

    DEPOSITS of high-silica kaolinite clays occur at many places in central Pennsylvania. These white clays were formed apparently by weathering of argillaceous quartzite and limestone. Their geology, dis

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Personal (3a06b169-d9ed-4034-a9c6-b31a0a9bfa07)

    (Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or their fellow-members) Members and guests who called at Institute headquarters during the period Feb. 10,

    Jan 4, 1917

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - The Tin-Fusion Method for the Determination of Hydrogen in Steel

    By D. J. Carney, J. Chipman, N. J. Grant

    SINCE the beginning of this century it has been known that hydrogen contributes to the porosity of steel and that it is harmful to its mechanical properties. The evidence for this has been largely qua

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Controlled Drying of Retorts

    By D. H. Wertz, R. R. Furlong

    Dry room equipment at Donora Zinc Works is of the design which prevailed at the time the plant was built in 1915. It consists of 11 adjoining rooms, each being 99 ft long, 11 ft wide, and 7 ft high an

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Discussions - Ore Reduction and Slags - Production of Low-sulphur Sponge Iron (Metals Tech., Oct. 1946, T. P. 2093, with discussion)

    By E. P. Shoub, J. P. Riott, R. C. Buehl

    Pilot-plant tests have demonstrated that it is possible to produce low-sulphur sponge iron (0.03 to 0.0; per cent sulphur) as a continuous process in an internally fired rotary kiln from iron ore or m

    Jan 1, 1948