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  • AIME
    Comparison Of Branch Raise And Combined Shrinkage And Caving Methods

    By Charles Mitke

    EXCLUDING top-slicing, and sublevel caving, large production caving methods may be divided into two general classes, the branch raise, or undercut caving method, and the combined shrinkage and caving

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    New Haven Paper - The Valuation of Mines of Definite Average Income

    By H. D. Hoskold

    As the theory and the practice of valuing mines have never been discussed in the Transactions, a paper on the subject may be acceptable, even though not exhaustive. The method here indicated is set fo

    Jan 1, 1903

  • AIME
    Notes On The Disadvantages Of Chrome Brick In Copper Reverberatory Furnaces

    By Francis Pyne

    THE following notes are presented in an endeavour to point out the disadvantages attending the use of chrome brick in reverberatory furnaces used in the treatment of materials that are too valuable to

    Jan 12, 1917

  • AIME
    Site Characterization For Prediction And Simulation Of Dynamic Events

    By Dwain K. Butler

    INTRODUCTION Characterization of a site for the prediction and simulation of dynamic events requires the determination of mechanical properties of the rock at stress/strain levels and rates and at

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    Mineral Slurry Transport - An Update

    By Noel W. Kirshenbaum, George A. Pouska, James M. Link

    Literally millions of words have been written on the subject of mineral slurry pipelining. The sheer bulk of literature on the subject should be enough to convince the interested observer that the met

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Relative Desulphurizing Powers of Blast-furnace Slags, II (296cc7cd-9fe7-4204-96ac-ebc021ac9c21)

    By W. F. Holbrock

    IN a previous paper1 a method for the measurement of the compara-tive desulphurizing power of slags was described and data, were presented covering the range of likely slags containing up to 10 per ce

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Toronto Paper - Chronology of Lead-Mining in the United States

    By W. R. Ingalls

    ThE following chronology presents the history of lead-mining in the United States in a brief form and is a useful reference in connection with the statistics of production: 1621.. Lead was mined and

    Jan 1, 1908

  • AIME
    The Block Method of Top Slicing of the Miami Copper Co.

    By E. G. Deane

    A METHOD of top slicing has been devised at the Miami Copper Co.'s mine at Miami, Ariz., which differs radically in some ways from the customary methods of top slicing. The area of that section

    Jan 9, 1916

  • AIME
    What Duty, to Support the Surface Does a Subsurface Owner Owe?

    By Robert Bosworth

    THE liability for damages to the surface caused by subsidence is an ever present threat in all underground mining. In ordinary lode mining, this threat rarely materializes into an action, due to the m

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Virginia Beach Paper - Aluminum-Bronze (see Discussion, p. 878)

    By Leonard Waldo

    PROBABLY some of the views advanced in this paper will appear, from a metallurgical standpoint, little less than revolutionary. It is with considerable hesitancy that I venture to offer a few thoughts

    Jan 1, 1895

  • AIME
    Progress In Mine Timber Preservation

    By Harry Tufft

    FOR many years the treatment of mine timbers with preservatives was confined to a few pioneer plants in the United States, and it is only in the past few years that the practice has grown appreciably.

    Jan 6, 1927

  • AIME
    Mount Lyell – Tasmania’s Copper Producer

    Such are the rigors of climate and topography of western Tasmania, that much of the area has remained uninhabited. The mountains, rising to peaks above 5000 ft high, receive the winds out of the west

    Jan 10, 1964

  • AIME
    NEW Haven Paper - The Ore Knob Copper Mine and Reduction Works, Ashe County, N. C.

    By Eben E. Olcott

    The Mine.—For some years attention has been drawn to the copper deposits of the Appalachian range of mountains, and especially to those in that portion crossing the corners of Virginia, North Carolina

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Physical Data of Igneous Emanation

    By Blamey Stevens

    My previous paper is entitled, The Laws of Igneous Ernanation Pressure. The present paper lays no claim to the exactitude and completeness of a law, since it is of a provisional nature and may be disr

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    The Mineral Industries of New England

    THE mineral resources of New England fall almost entirely in the non-metallic group. Metal produc-tion is so insignificant that no separate figures are obtainable; whatever production there may be is

    Jan 6, 1928

  • AIME
    One Hundred Nineteenth Meeting Of The Institute

    Cooperation will be the keynote of the meeting of the Institute that will be held in New York on February 17 to 20. Arrangements are being made for two joint sessions with the Canadian Mining Institut

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Cost and Extraction in the Selection of a Mining Method

    By C. E. Arnold

    IN attacking the problems of mining and treating large disseminated copper orebodies such as those occurring in the Miami or the Ray district of Arizona, one of the vital questions to be decided is, "

    Jan 9, 1916

  • AIME
    Part V – May 1968 - Papers - A Stereographic Representation of Knoop Hardness Anisotropy

    By R. G. Garlick, M. Garfinkle

    It was observed for several bcc metal crystals that the Knoop hardness anisotropy was dependent essentially on the direction of the lung axis of the indentor alone and not on the plane of indentation.

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Silver Bell

    IN THE early evening of October 15, 1954, a large specially designed truck, convoyed by a second smaller one, arrived at Silver Bell, Arizona, completing a ten-hour 110-mile journey from Phoenix. The

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Chattanooga Paper - A New Steam-engine Indicator

    By John E. Sweet

    There have already been so many subjects of a purely mechanical nature presented to the Institute of Mining Engineers, that it is unnecessary for me to apologize for adding another to the list. Whe

    Jan 1, 1879