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  • AIME
    Design of the Leadville Concentrator

    By Donald E. Crowell

    Due to falling metal prices and depletion of ore reserves, lead- zinc mining in the Leadville, Colo., area gradually came to a halt in the 1950's. Exploration work continued, however, and by 1969

    Jan 11, 1972

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - Effect of Subcritical Rate on the Brittle-Fracture Characteristics of Structural Steel

    By L. Mair

    A STUDY by J. R. Low, Jr.1 on the effect of quench aging on the Charpy-impact specimens of semikilled 1020 steel disclosed that a decrease in cooling rate from 1275°F raised the transition temperature

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Standing Committees (9ec7de60-0dfc-43be-9218-2ae8ff49e52a)

    Executive Committee, Board of Directors Augustus B Kinzel, Chairman, J L Glllson, Vice-Chairman, A W Thornton, Howard C Pyle, Grover J Holt Finance Committee, Board of Directors Andrew Fletcher, Chai

    Jan 1, 1958

  • AIME
    The Physical Chemistry Of Hydrometallurgy

    By E. Peters

    As in other fields of Extractive Metallurgy, Hydrometallurgy is preoccupied with separation processes and with oxidation-reduction processes. The physical chemistry of each type of process can be desc

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    Recent Improvements In Mining Practice On The Mesabi Range (f38d5d9d-3039-4a10-aa6e-c9f90bff9271)

    By J. Murray Riddell, Arthur E. Anderson, Grover J. Holt

    OUT of the depths of each business cycle we emerge with a stimulus for greater efficiency and a realization of progress in industrial technique. The recent years have not been an exception to this rul

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Petroleum-Refining Methods Available For Wartime Demands

    By W. C. Dickerman, J. F. Thornton

    TOTAL global war is making extraordinary demands on the oil industry. Huge quantities of 100-octane gasoline, extreme service lubes, toluene and other miscellaneous products are required. 100-octane g

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Some Problems of Today

    By Thomas A. Edison

    We have not yet begun. to realize the possibilities of automatic machinery, in part because we have not developed the designing brains, and in part because we have not sufficiently simplified industry

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Study of Structural Problems by Geophysical Means Gains in Importance

    By Sherwin F. Kelly

    GEOPHYSICS may be considered a vice (albeit, I submit, a comparatively harmless one) whose career is aptly described by Pope's lines: Vice is a monster of so frightful mien, As to be hated need

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Few Changes in Lead Metallurgy Reported

    By Carle R. Hayward

    ATHOUGH there are signs of improvement in the lead industry, conditions are still far from what we have been accustomed to call normal. There has been little to stim¬ulate research and those responsib

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    McDermitt, Nevada - McDermitt Mine History Of Discovery

    By L. O. Storey

    The McDermitt mine was found as a separate mercury ore-bearing occurrence approximately 305 m (1000 ft) northeasterly and in a different geologic setting from the old Cordero mine, which had been the

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Occurrence of Silver-, Copper-, and Lead-Ores at the Veta Rica Mine, Sierra Mojada, Coahuila, Mexico

    By Frank R. Van Horn

    In the summer of 1908, R. B. Cochran, Superintendent of the Compania Metalurgica Mexicana at Sierra Mojada, Mexico, presented to the Department of Geology and Mineralogy at Case School of Applied Scie

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Engineering Reasearch - Asphaltic Substances in Crude Oils (Petr. Tech., Sept. 1942)

    By C. E. Cottrell, G. W. Preckshot, N. D. Delisle, D. L. Katz

    Most crude oils contain asphaltic substances that may be naturally or artificially precipitated. In the Greeley field, California, this asphaltic bitumen is precipitated during the flow of the oil fro

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Engineering Reasearch - Asphaltic Substances in Crude Oils (Petr. Tech., Sept. 1942)

    By G. W. Preckshot, C. E. Cottrell, D. L. Katz, N. D. Delisle

    Most crude oils contain asphaltic substances that may be naturally or artificially precipitated. In the Greeley field, California, this asphaltic bitumen is precipitated during the flow of the oil fro

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Many Coal Companies Now Interested in Scholarships

    By George H. Deike

    DURING the past year a survey was conducted by the Committee on the Promotion of Student Interest in Coal Mining to determine whether the program as laid down in past years was operating effectively.

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Papers - Geophysics Education - Place of Geophysics in a Department of Geology (T. P. 945)

    By M. King Hubert

    The growth of human knowledge is an evolutionary process. Historically our separate sciences came into existence as people became interested in various apparently unrelated domains of phenomena, and i

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Papers - Geophysics Education - Place of Geophysics in a Department of Geology (T. P. 945)

    By M. King Hubert

    The growth of human knowledge is an evolutionary process. Historically our separate sciences came into existence as people became interested in various apparently unrelated domains of phenomena, and i

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Beneficiation Of Industrial Minerals By Heavy-Media Separation

    By G. B. Walker

    THE sink-float methods designated by heavy-media separation processes were pioneered by C. Erb Weunsch for the treatment of base metal ores as an improvement over jigs. The work of Weunsch was further

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Fire-Fighting Methods at the Mountain View Mine, Butte, Mont.

    By C. L. Berrien

    Many fires have occurred in the mines of Butte in recent years, and while all have been of a serious nature, simply because they were mine fires, six of them have been especially dangerous in respect

    Jan 1, 1916

  • AIME
    New Developments in Unburned Magnesite Brick for the Metallurgical Industry

    By A. CHESTER BEATTY

    MAGNESIUM oxide is by far the most refractory of the common oxides, since it has a melting point of 5072 deg. F. as compared with 3110 deg. F., the melting point of silica (crystobalite) ; 3722 deg. F

    Jan 1, 1931