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  • AIME
    Mountain Bumps At The Sunnyside Mines

    By John Peperakis

    Coal mine bumps are normally associated with pillar mining under moderate or deep cover. Severe bumps at Sunnyside, however, have not been confined to pillar lines. Many have occurred in virgin develo

    Jan 9, 1958

  • AIME
    The Control Of Fine Particle Beneficiation Processes

    By A. J. Lynch, W. J. Whiten

    Extensive research, ,development and plant application work has been done on automatic control systems for wet grinding and sulphide flotation circuits during the past twenty years. The result is that

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Called “Mission Impossible”, Freeport’s Ertsberg Cu Project Convinces Skeptics

    Dubbed "Freeport's Mission Impossible" by the trade press, the company's Ertsberg mine in West Irian nevertheless shipped its first concentrates in December 1972, ahead of schedule. This is

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    Pyrometry In Blast-Furnace Work

    By P. H. Royster

    For a number of years the Bureau of Mines has been investigating certain problems relating to the blast furnace. In the course of these investigations it was desirable to measure, with the optical pyr

    Jan 9, 1919

  • AIME
    The Cavability of Ore Deposits

    By Francis S. Kendorski

    Caving offers the lowest cost per ton of ally large-scale mining method, but its successful application demands an ore body that conforms to several rigid requirements. The deposit must be of wide are

    Jan 6, 1978

  • AIME
    Rio Blanco

    Hunkered up against the spine of the Andes in a tight valley where natural refuge from avalanche hardly exists is the daring Rio Blanco project of Cerro Corp. The deposit here was found in 1904, but n

    Jan 11, 1969

  • AIME
    Mather Mine Uses Pipeline Concrete In Underground Operations

    By Harry C. Swanson

    TRANSPORTING concrete from mixer to forms has always been a problem. Twenty-five years ago this task was generally accomplished by means of wheelbarrow or concrete buggy. On large dam jobs, as the num

    Jan 4, 1954

  • AIME
    Waste Disposal – Vital to Atomic Power Development

    By John M. Warde, Raymond M. Richardson

    What to do with atomic wastes is one of the major problems of the atomic age. Unlike other waste materials, these cannot be burned, evaporated, or filtered, and the transfer of radioactive material fr

    Jan 5, 1955

  • AIME
    Mineral Science And The Future Of Metals

    By Lyman H. Hart

    Some of the significant facts that will affect the supply and demand for metals during the next few decades are given in this presentation. This is important because the only hope for intelligent guid

    Jan 4, 1973

  • AIME
    Organized Speed - Key To Successful Tunnel Results

    By T. F. Adams, D. P. Morse

    Tunneling is primarily an excavating cycle consisting of a sequence of operations: drilling, shooting, ventilating, mucking, and erecting supports, if necessary. However, the type and condition of the

    Jan 4, 1958

  • AIME
    Chicago Discussions -Discussion of paper of Prof. ?kerman (See p. 265).

    Joseph HartshoRnE, Pottstown, Pa.: I have read Professor Akerman's valuable paper with great interest. Few of the present generation of American steel metallurgists are aware of the very importan

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Geophysics and Geochemistry - Structure Calculation from Gravity Data and Density Logs

    By Z. F. Danes

    Combination of gravity data and density logs makes it possible to determine the structural relief. Under a wide class of geologic conditions, the solution is unique, or limited to a single parametric

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Further Evidence of Zoning in a Nickel-Chromium-Titanium-Aluminum Alloy

    By N. E. Rogen, N. J. Grant

    AGE-hardening in nickel-chromium-titanium-aluminum alloys in the composition range characterized by the Nimonic alloys, is dependent upon the precipitation of the Ni3(AI,Ti) (y') phase.1 This pha

    Jan 1, 1959

  • AIME
    Determination Of Suspensoids By Alternating-Current Precipitators

    By Philip Drinker

    IN THE mining and metallurgical industries, numerous problems arise requiring determinations of solid and of liquid particles suspended in air. Frequently, these problems are of local interest and inv

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    Mining Geology In 1953

    By George M. Schwartz

    WHEN reviewing the progress made in mining geology for the year 1953, one might say that not much has been accomplished and, indeed, in a subject such as economic geology not much progress should be e

    Jan 2, 1954

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - Filler Material for the Brazing of Titanium

    By N. A. DeCecco, H. M. Meyer

    IN the early stages of a titanium brazing investigation, binary titanium systems partially or completely known and fundamental metallurgical data were surveyed to select the pure metal most likely to

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AIME
    Mineral Resources

    By Donald H. McLaughlin

    THE primary function of the mining engineer is to find mineral deposits and fuels in the accessible rocks of the earth and to recover them for the vast needs of our complicated civilization. On him ha

    Jan 2, 1953

  • AIME
    Salt - Gravimetric Survey of the Malagash Salt Deposit, Nova Scotia (T. P. 737)

    By G. W. H. Norman, A. H. Miller

    This survey is one of the more recent tests of geophysical methods of prospecting by the Dominion Observatory and the Geological Survey of Canada, of which the purpose is to find out what application

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Thailand

    By John V. Beall

    Thai means free. Historically accurate, as the country has never been subjugated by foreign occupation, the name "The Land of the Free" also seems to fit the attitude of the people. At the Bangkok air

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - The Influence of Location upon the Pig-Iron Industry (Presidential Address at Plattsburgh)

    By John Birkinbine

    The press, trade publications, and special circulars, some elaborately illustrated, have been liberally employed within recent years in this country, to set forth the advantages of various locations a

    Jan 1, 1893