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  • AIME
    Offshore Prospecting And Mining Laws Of The United States - Sometimes Hazy, Sometimes Lacking, They Often Confuse Prospectors

    By J. Leslie Goodier

    The International Law of the Continental Shelf, so far ratified by 35 nations, extends the national boundary of any coastal nation to the edge of the continental shelf, this normally being at a contin

    Jan 7, 1968

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Papers - Classification - Constitution and Nature of Pennsylvania. Anthracite with Comparisons to Bituminous Coal (With Discussion)

    By Homer Griffield Turner

    The nature and comparative features of anthracite and bituminous coals have been discussed by the writer in two previous papers.' Although this paper is offered as a further contribution to the s

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering – General - Predication of the Phase Behavior Generated by the Enriched-Gas Drive Process

    By A. M. Rowe, I. H. Silberberg

    A computer program was written to predict the phase behavior generated by the enriched-gas-drive process. This program is based, in part, on a new concept of convergence pressme, which is then used to

    Jan 1, 1966

  • AIME
    The Significance Of The Mineral Industries In The Economy (8045fb5d-c927-41ce-b1d1-c2b2c5064a37)

    By Charles White Merrill

    Mankind's progress is measured in minerals. Man's emergence from prehistory is marked by passage through a Stone Age and a Bronze Age and into the present era, sometimes called the Iron Age

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Engineers in American Life

    By L. W. WALLACE

    IN an engineering fashion we have made an assay of the engineering profession, using as a. sample the engineers listed in "Who's Who in America" (1928-1929). We are aware that some will say it is

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Nonferrous Metallurgists Hear About Zinc, Lead, Aluminum, Magnesium, and Nickel

    By Wm. E. Milligan

    DESPITE the zero weather of Monday, the morning meeting on nonferrous ore-reduction metallurgy got under way promptly under the efficient control of Arthur A. Center. The first and third portions of t

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Mineral Education

    By Charles H. Fulton

    FOR some time it has been thought that there should be > closer relationship between the members' of the Institute engaged in education in the mining schools, the mining, metallurgical, ceramic,

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Problems of .Education and Industry

    By AIME AIME

    THE statements quoted below range widely over the field of contact between education and industry. 'Their sources are as indicated. True Education "Education must escape from its traditional

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Anaconda's Dump Leaching Flows Smoothly with FRP Pipe System

    Extremes in temperature and weather, along with the highly corrosive nature of acid leach solutions used at open-pit copper mines, necessitates the use of pipeline systems that are both corrosion resi

    Jan 6, 1976

  • AIME
    PART XII – December 1967 – Papers - Kinetics of Silver Cementation on Copper in Perchloric Acid and Alkaline Cyanide Solutions

    By E. A. von Hahn, T. R. lngraham

    Cementation rates ulere studied by rotating an elec-tropolished or etched copper strip in aqueous solutions, of either perchloric acid or alkaline cyanide, containing silver ions. The rates of cemen

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Emergency Methods Used by the German Iron and Steel Industry

    By BERNARD PLANNER

    PRODUCTION COSTS, profits, and quality are the primary factors in the peacetime production of iron and steel. In a war emergency, as high production rates and as complete utilization of readily availa

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    The Equipment of a Laboratory for Metallurgical Chemistry in a Technical School

    By C. H. White

    Discussion of a Paper by Mr. C. H. White, read at the Atlantic City Meeting, February, 1904. (Annual Meeting, February, 1005.) ARTHUR JARMAN, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (communication to the

    Mar 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Past and Future Education of Engineers

    By C. E. MacQuigg

    BY and large the education of the engineer has been conservative and the reasons for this are obvious. Quite properly it has been a tradition of engineering education that facts and not fancies must b

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Crisis in the Coal Code

    By A. T. Shurick

    WHATEVER the outcome of the Industrial Recovery Act, it has currently injected the first hope and optimism into the coal industry for more than a decade. Compared with the recent drab years the result

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Papers on Magnetic and Electrical Methods at Geophysics Session

    By Sherwin F. Kelly

    LITERALLY from the four corners of the earth, from Jerusalem and China, from Mysore and Uganda, as well as from geophysicists in the United States, came contributions from workers in magnetic and elec

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    World Congress at Tokyo

    By AIME AIME

    MANY of the important papers to be presented at the World Congress of Engineering at Tokyo, in November, 1929, are being furnished by members of A.I.M.E. and a list of them is given below: "Fifty Year

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Reduction of Oxides in the Graphite Vacuum Fusion Method of Analysis for Oxygen

    By N. A. Ziegler

    THE chief difficulty in determining oxygen in steels is its tendency to form a variety of compounds. Almost every element, found as an ingredient in steels, maybe expected to be present as an oxide. S

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    The Methane Detector as an Aid to Mine Safety

    By Arthur Glance

    MINE safety is of the utmost importance to all operators and most operations have a safety organization, or safety inspector, whose job it is to be continually on the alert to detect and correct the h

    Jan 1, 1936