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  • AIME
    A Pattern for Sound Fuel Procurement

    By Raymond Brandon, Marshall Pease

    A pattern for providing a large utility, The Detroit Edison Co., with an adequate fuel supply is outlined. From the standpoint of both fuel procurement and utilization, consideration has been given co

    Jan 2, 1951

  • AIME
    Board of Directors

    Meeting of Sept. 25, 1914.-The Committees to have charge of the arrangements for the Annual Meeting in New York, Feb. 15 to 18, 1914, were appointed. It was voted that the Secretary of the Institute

    Jan 11, 1914

  • AIME
    Notes On The Electrolytic Refining Of Copper Precipitate Anodes. (dd6dc84e-9a22-400e-b0a6-f932db07baa2)

    By W. F. Burns

    (Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) ATTEMPTS were made in 1908, at the Great Falls Works, to produce ingots direct from the Butte precipitate by smelting- the material in a reverberatory refining furnace.

    Jan 7, 1913

  • AIME
    Current Trend of Production and Consumption of Sources of Energy

    By Eugene Ayres

    This study is concerned primarily with a backward look at the projections made in the Report to the President by the President's Materials Policy Commission issued in June 1952. Only a few years

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Fine Grind - MBD-Its Contribution To Professional Development

    By Robert S. Shoemaker

    Recently we read a short article which stated that Marcona Corp. was studying the use of 25,000-hp autogenous grinding mills for an iron ore project in Alaska. As if that weren't enough, they wer

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Discussion - Genesis Of Titaniferous Magnetites And Associated Rocks Of The Lake Sanford District, New York - Mining Engineering, March 1956; AIME Trans., Vol. 205 – Gillson, J. L.

    By Andre Hubaux

    In the writer's opinion, more stress should be put on field and microscope observations, as J. L. Gillson does. His discovery of relics of big labradorite feldspars from the Marcy anorthosite in

    Jan 3, 1958

  • AIME
    St. Louis Meeting (e0a83807-5a60-46be-b139-3bb5072098e1)

    Zinc is just now a very important metal. Its use in cartridges and shrapnel brass are in the public eye. But its uses after the war are no less important. Brass as an engineering material for electric

    Jan 6, 1917

  • AIME
    Effect of pH on the Zeta Potential of Chrysocolla

    By Frank W. Bowdish, T. M. Plouf

    The purpose of this writing is to make available additional data, not previously published, on the zeta potential at various pH values of chrysocolla from the Inspiration mine, Arizona. Much research

    Jan 1, 1974

  • AIME
    Library (6f9a3b12-83e6-4daf-812c-6ce5acb148a6)

    The Library of the above-named Societies is open from 9 A.M. to 10 P.M., except on holidays. It contains about 70,000 volumes and 90,000 pamphlets, including sets of technical periodicals and the publ

    Jan 10, 1916

  • AIME
    Discussion of Papers - An Infrared Study of the Activation and Flotation of Beryl with Hydrofluoric and Oleic Acid

    By Ross W. Smith, M. E. Wadsworth, T. James Smolik, A. S. Peck

    Ross W. Smith (Acting Instructor, Department of Mineral Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.) and T. James Smolik (Kennecott Copper Corp., Salt Lake City, Utah) - Professors Peck and Wad

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    New Method of Mapping with Aid of Aerial Photographs and Slotted Templets

    By W. H. Jr. Meyer

    Although an aerial photograph is not a map, most of the information that is necessary for compiling a map is recorded in the photograph provided some form of radial-line method is used to determine th

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Chemical Processors Can Pose Tough Hurdles To Would-Be Suppliers Of Industrial Minerals

    By J. K. Brooke, R. M. Dreyer

    For mining engineers and geologists accustomed evaluating metallic mineral deposits, the problems inherent in determining the worth of non- metallic industrial minerals deposits for the chemical proce

    Jan 8, 1962

  • AIME
    Geologic Setting of the Nickel Occurrences on Jumbo Mountain, Washington

    By Joseph W. Mills

    In 1956 the discovery of nickel on Jumbo Mountain, Snohomish County, Washington, focused attention on this part of the Cascade Range, far more renowned for its timber than for its mineral resources. H

    Jan 3, 1960

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Factor Analysis of Mineral Species Frequencies in the Smallwood Mine, Labrador

    By Erwin Zodrow

    An elaborate model for the magnetite distribution and genesis in the Smallwood mine, Labrador, based on factor analysis with orthogonal and oblique rotation of the factors, was proposed in an earlier

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Washington D.C. Paper - Some Drift Hematite Deposits in East Tennessee

    By Edward Nichols

    These deposits, which are found in James County, Tennessee, differ both in their mode of occurrence and in their chemical constitution from any other ores belonging to the same geological horizon whic

    Jan 1, 1882

  • AIME
    Meet The Authors (b69ba8c9-9fb1-431b-a8dd-fb197e74e920)

    Fred D. DeVaney (Magnetic Roasting of Iron Ores, P. 1219) has presented several other AIME papers, all of them concerned with grinding and concentrating problems. He is chief metallurgist, Pickands Ma

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Uranium Occurrences Of The United States

    By Thomas N. Walthier

    ROSPECTING for uranium in the East is hampered by the lack of bedrock exposure due to extensive overburden and residual soil. But, despite the problems of this physiographic province, it has not been

    Jun 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Subsidence Interaction Effects In Multi-Seam Mining

    By S. Webster, M. Karmis, C. Haycocks

    Mining any seam can seriously affect subsequent operations in coal seams both above and below the one being mined. The effect is often detrimental to the recovery, cost and safety of mining the subseq

    Jan 1, 1984

  • AIME
    Pennsylvania Stows Refuse To Bolster Abandoned Coal Mines

    By David R. Maneval, Ralph A. Lambert, H. B. Charmbury

    Subsidence, although it may or may not be apparent on the surface, is an inevitable consequence of deep coal mining and a frequent cause of damage to surface structures. Efforts to prevent subsidence

    Jan 4, 1967