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  • AIME
    Alaska Mining's Chilly Future in the Land of the Midnight Sun

    By Russell A. Carter

    Alaska is a land of immense proportions and resources. Its very name, derived from an Aleut term, means "The Great Land." Yet, in a state slightly larger than Texas, California, and Montana combined,

    Jan 11, 1976

  • CIM
    Alaska native exploration and mining agreements: Negotiating equitable agreements with Alaska native interests

    By D. S. Case

    "Following a brief explanation of the land arrangements under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, this paper will examine both a mineral exploration agreement and a mining development agreement n

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SME
    Alaska Way visit highlights Megaprojects conference in Seattle

    When defining a ?megaproject,? one need only to look at Seattle, WA?s State Route 99 Alaskan Way Viaduct replacement project. This $3.1-billion project is one of the largest of its kind in the world,

    Dec 1, 2013

  • IMMS
    Alaska's Marine Minerals: A Case For Assessment And Evaluation

    By James C. Barker

    Alaska's expansive continental shelf represents future opportunities for marine mineral development. Although today's metal prices and subsidized foreign mineral production continue to disco

    Jan 1, 1991

  • SME
    Alaska's Rare Earth Deposit And Resource Potential

    By James C. Barker

    Alaska?s known mineral endowment includes some of the largest and highest grade deposits of various metals, including gold, copper and zinc. Recently, Alaska has also been active in the worldwide sear

    Jan 1, 2012

  • AIME
    Alaska: Regional Report

    To Americans, Alaska occupies a unique position, both geographically and historically. The only integral portion of the United States lying in the sub-Arctic and Arctic regions of the Earth, the early

    Jan 12, 1961

  • SME
    Alaskan Coals

    By Cleland N. Conwell

    Intermittent coal mining has been conducted in Alaska for over a century. The first report of coal in Alaska was by the Veechy expedition of 1826 and 1827. Whaling ships used coal from Corwin Bluff ne

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Alaskan Coals May Prove a Big Plus in Future Exports Picture

    By Cleland N. Conwell

    Coals are found in all parts of Alaska, ranging in geologic age from Carboniferous to Tertiary, and grading from lignite through anthracite. Only the Matanuska and Nenana coal fields have been extensi

    Jan 10, 1972

  • AIME
    Alaskan Platinum Development at Goodnews Bay Makes U. S. Platinum Production Important

    By Winston W. Spencer

    ALTHOUGH by far the largest A consumer of platinum metals in the world, the United States until recently has been in- significant as a producer. Writing in the "Minerals Yearbook" for 1939, H. W. Davi

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Albany Paper - Application of Electricity in the Anthracite Coal-Field of Pennsylvania, with Special Reference to the Wyoming Field (Discussion, p. 976)

    By H. H. Stoek, G. W. Harries

    The term " Anthracite Coal-Field " is generally used to refer to a comparatively small territory lying in the eastern-central part of Pennsylvania. This territory includes about 3,300 sq. miles of are

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - Biographical Notice of Abram S. Hewitt. (Frontispiece)

    By R. W. Raymond

    The tidings of Mr. Hewitt's death, cabled to me at Rome, Italy, brought me a great shock as well as a sincere sorrow. I had left him, a few weeks before, not indeed in vigorous health, but still

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - Electrical Power-Transmission for Mines

    By Francis O. Blackwell

    There are few industries in which power is more important to successful operation than mining, and none in which it is so difficult to ohtain power cheaply. Fuel is usually expeusive in mining dist

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - Notes on the Metallurgy of Copper of Montana

    By H. O. Hofman

    PAGE I. Introductory,.......... 258 11. Condensed Account of Past and Present Plants,. .. 259 111. The Ores. Table I., Average Analyses,..... IV. Metallurgical Treatment—Roasting OF Ores,... The

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - Operations of the Hudson River Water-Power Company

    By Charles E. Parsons

    One of the greatest factors in our industrial development is cheap and convenient power. Long-distance electrical transmission has now reached such a stage that it is feasible, and practicable, to uti

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - Origin of Pebble-Covered Plains in Desert Regions

    By William P. Blake

    The attention of travellers, upon the desert bordering the Great Colorado of the West, is often arrested by broad stretches of pebble-covered plains, or mesas, glittering in the sunlight from the myri

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - School Laboratory-Work : A Free-Milling Gold-Run

    By Robert H. Richards, E. E. Bugbee

    Friends often ask how accurate the work of our little stamp mill is, or express the opinion that a little mill cannot do good work. As a reply we would like to place on record the results of a few tes

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - The Box Electric Rock-Drill

    By Frank E. Shepard

    Electric power in mining-operations is now successfully applied to haulage, hoisting, lighting and pumping; and until lately, drilling was the one department of mining in which an electric source of e

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - The Cost of Pumping at the Short Mountain Colliery of the Lykens Valley Coal Company

    By R. V. Norris

    The great coal strike of 1902, which confined the work at the Short Mountain colliery of the Lykens Valley Coal Com pany almost exclusively to pumping, gave an opportunity to determine with considerab

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - The Geology and the Copper-Deposits of Bisbee, Arizona

    By F. L. Ransome

    The following paper aims to present in a much condensed form the salient results of a detailed geological study of the Bisbee quadrangle, Arizona, carried on during the latter part of the year 1902. I

    Jan 1, 1904