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  • AIME
    Positions Vacant (9aac8b35-769a-46d0-8ba5-dd30a938894e)

    Assistant Professor of Mining Engineering.-Mining engineer to teach mine surveying, mine mapping, assaying, etc., but not metallurgy. Location, Ohio. Salary, $1800 per annum. No. 379. Metallurgist.-E

    Jan 4, 1919

  • AIME
    Grinding Practice At Tennessee Copper Co’s Isabella Mill

    By F. M. Lewis, J. E. Goodman

    TENNESSEE Copper Co. operates two ore concentrators, the London and Isabella mill. Copperhill, Tenn. In 1948 and 1949 the small ball mills and rake classifiers in the London concentrator were replaced

    Jan 11, 1957

  • AIME
    Preservation Of The Environment

    By Samuel M. Brock

    In recent years society has become increasingly concerned with maintaining and improving the quality of environment. Thus, public interest and concern with pollution problems is now high. This is refl

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    New Haven Paper - The Elimination of Arsenic, Antimony and Bismuth from Copper

    By Allan Gibb

    The ores of copper are usually associated with minerals containing arsenic, antimony and bismuth. Whatever the means adopted for extracting the copper, these metals are usually found, to a greater or

    Jan 1, 1903

  • AIME
    Honorary Members of the Institute

    PROF RICHARD ÅKERMAN Stockholm, Sweden DR FRANK DAWSON ADAMS Montreal, Canada PROF HATON DE LA GOUPILLIERE Paris, France SIR ROBERT A. HADFEILD London, England HERBERT C. HOOVER Leoben, Austria

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Chicago, Ill Paper - The Cauca Mining District, U.S. of Colombia. S.A.

    By John Hays Hammond

    The following notes are descriptive of a country as yet in its infancy as regards the advancement made in mining operations. Its inaccessibility and other militating circumstances have retarded progre

    Jan 1, 1885

  • AIME
    Pittsburg Paper - A Method of Calculating Sinking-Funds, and a Table of Values for Ordinary Periods and Rates of Interest

    By J. B. Dilworth

    In estimating the investment-value of a mining-property or plant, the value of which decreases with operation, it is often necessary to know the sum which must be set aside periodically from earnings

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Law of Fatigue and Refreshment of Metals

    By T. Egleston

    For several years 1 have been engaged in studying the behavior of iron and steel under varying conditions of tension and compression, as well as of shock and abrasion. Some of these observations have

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Producing-Equipment, Methods and Materials - The Differentiation Methods in Rheology: IV. Characteristic Derivatives of Ideal Models in Couette Flow

    By J. C. Savins, G. C. Wallick, W. R. Foster

    The dual differentiation-integration method of rbeological analysis is applied to Couette flow. Using machine processing techniques, a spectrum of characteristic derivative functions for a variety of

  • AIME
    Drilling and Blasting Practice of the United States Potash Company at Carlsbad, New Mexico

    By C. A. Pierce

    UNDERGROUND operations of the United States Potash Co. at its mine near Carlsbad, N.M., have been continuous since the property was opened about five years ago. Approximately one million tons of potas

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Geophysics - Value of Geophysico-Statistical Methods in Finding Soft Iron Ore in Northern Canada

    By Maurice K. Seguin

    It is a difficult task to find enriched soft iron ore deposits in the central part of the Labrador Trough, New Quebec, Canada, when the areas investigated are covered by glacial drift. A qualitative i

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Magnetic Concentration of Low-Grade Iron Ores (with Discussion)

    By S. Norton, S. LeFevre

    In the West, capitalists have expended many millions of dollars developing the low-grade porphyry ores of copper. Half a dozen of these great enterprises have proved to be wonderful commercial success

    Jan 1, 1917

  • AIME
    Coal-Washing

    By John Fulton

    THE increase in the production of iron has been accompanied by a growing demand for an improved quality, and more especially at the present time, in the manufacture of Bessemer steel, which is rapidly

    Jan 1, 1875

  • AIME
    Metal Mining - Underground Air Conditions and Ventilation Methods at Tonopah, Nev. (with Discussion)

    By B. O. Pickard

    With more than a score of shafts and numerous stope openings to the surface, all inter-connected underground; with underground temperatures high, often exceeding 100' wet bulb; with an ore presen

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    The Supposed Reversal Of Inheritance Of Ferrite Grain Size From That Of Austenite

    By Henry Howe

    THE data which are collected in Table 1 show that the ferrite of low-carbon steel and of electrolytic iron, like the network of hypo- and hyper-eutectoid carbon steel, inherits, either absolutely or r

    Jan 9, 1917

  • AIME
    Notes on the Case-Hardening of Special Steels.

    By ROBERT R. ABUOTT

    Discussion of the paper of Prof. Albert Sauveur and, G. A. Reinhardt, presented at the Cleveland meeting, October, 1912, and printed in Bulletin No. 71, November, 1912, pp. 1335 to 1341. ROBERT R. AB

    Dec 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Personal (0227d2ab-594b-4b54-8aa7-94565f2ccb69)

    The following is an incomplete list of members and guests who called at Institute headquarters during the period Jan. 10, 1918 to Feb. 10, 1918: K. Baumgarten, San Diego, Cal. J. A. Meyerovitch, Pe

    Jan 3, 1918

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Flameless Combustion

    By Carleton Ellis

    The problem of the influence of hot surfaces upon gaseous combustion is one which, from a purely scientific standpoint, has engaged, for many years past, the attention of Prof. William A. Bone, of Lee

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Newman Hearth

    By William E. Newman

    The smelting of galena in the ore hearth has been practiced in many countries for several hundred years with varying success. In the United States, the water-jacketed American hearths and the Jumbb he

    Jan 1, 1916

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Significance of Manganese in American Steel Metallurgy (with Discussion)

    By F. H. Willcox

    In Bessemer-steel practice, air is blown through a bath of iron, or projected strongly upon its surface to burn out silicon, manganese, and cafbon. Toward the end of the blow, when the iron is not pro

    Jan 1, 1917