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  • AIME
    147th Meeting of the Institute - More Than 2100 People, a New Record, Renew Old Friendship and Discuss 200 Papers

    By AIME AIME

    CERTAINLY in point of attendance, and doubtless in several other ways as well, the 147th meeting of the A.I.M.E. was the best ever held. In times of depression, mining engineers and metallurgists have

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    A Plea for Mineral-Mindedness

    By Charles W. Merrill

    IF we follow the threads of the mining problems, upon which I have touched, we find them all leading to one great fundamental desideratum. The people of this State, of this Nation, and of this world m

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Address at Utah Meeting

    By J. V. W. REYNDERS

    NOT only is your toastmaster silver-tongued in his references 'to myself, but he is also quite in the habit of "saying it in silver." I have analyzed with some care his statistics of the world&ap

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Annual Report of the Woman's Auxiliary

    ANNUAL meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary of the American Institute of Mining and Metal-lurgical Engineers convened on Tuesday morn-ing, Feb. 20, the president, Mrs. H. W. Hardinge, presiding. Pres

    Jan 4, 1923

  • AIME
    Asbestos - a Strategic Mineral ? Has the United States Adequate Sources of Supply?

    By Oliver Bowles

    AUTOMOTIVE TRANSPORT by highway, which has become indispensable to modern life either in peace or war, involves the use of powerful machines, many of which travel at high speed. To start, accelerate,

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Atlantic City Paper - A Decade in American Blast-Furnace Practice (Discussion, p. 973)

    By F. Louis Grammer

    The iron industry has been so markedly the cynosure of all eyes, that a sense of weariness has overtaken many on-lookers, and a new wonder is desired. While the commercial phase of the iron industr

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Baltimore Meeting

    THE first session was held in the small hall of the Academy of Music, on Tuesday evening, February 18th, 1879. The proceedings were opened by the reading, by President Eckley B. Coxe, of the follow

    Jan 1, 1879

  • AIME
    Biographical Notice of Sir Lowthian Bell, Baronet

    By Henry M. Howe

    THE death of Sir Lowthian Bell removes almost the last of the group of heroic leaders who made their age and ours the Age of Steel-a group which his luster and the luster of his peers, Bessemer, Sieme

    Sep 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Biographical Notices of 1905

    By Bruno KERL

    THE list of deaths reported during the year 1905 comprises the following names (the figures in parentheses indicating the year in which the persons named were elected to membership:- Honorary Member.

    May 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Biographical Notices, 1907

    By AIME AIME

    THE following paragraphs comprise such information as the Secretary has been able to obtain concerning the members and associates whose deaths have been reported. Further particulars or corrections of

    Jan 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Boston and Keweenaw

    By J. Robert Van Peli

    IT was a strange but highly fruitful marriage-that union of hardy explorers, seeking the rich treasures of copper in the Lake Superior wilderness, with Boston's aristocracy of brains, capital, an

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Some Thoughts and Suggestions on Technical Education - Presidential Address

    By T. Egleston

    FOR a great part of the progress of the world we are indebted to the works of engineers. It is to them that we owe our means of rapid transportation, our canals, our railroads, our bridges, many of ou

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Buffalo Paper - The Evolution of Mine-Surveying Instruments (See, as to Discussion, Secretary's note, p. 919)

    By Dunbar D. Scott

    The development in the perfection of mine-surveying instruments has been by no means rapid, as it has depended somewhat on the details of construction borrowed from astronomical and geodetic theodolit

    Jan 1, 1899

  • AIME
    Chattanooga Paper - The Kaffir Mine-Laborer

    By Thomas Lane Carter

    The history of mining in South Africa differs somewhat from that of other countries in the part taken by the aborigines in the development of the mineral deposits. The Spaniards in America, and the fo

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Chilex Mine Model Revised

    APPROXIMATELY 26 percent of the total ore production to date from the largest single deposit of copper-bearing material in the world was mined during the war years, 1942 to 1945, at Chile Exporation C

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Clouds Over Mining - Labor Difficulties, Unjust Taxation, Lowered Tariffs, Diminishing Reserves, Challenge the Best Thought of the Industry

    By L. S. Cates

    THE war is now behind us. We in the mining industry feel a just pride in the part that our industry and our men and our products played in defeating the enemy on the fighting fronts around the world.

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Clyde Evarts Weed - Director, AIME

    By Clyde Evarts Weed

    SOME one once affirmed his great belief in luck, adding that he had found that the harder he worked the more luck he had. Clyde Weed is a firm believer in this method of courting the fugitive lady. He

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Coal Follows Through

    By E. G. Bailey

    PLANTS that normally burn coal now able too obtain a substantial increase over their normal supply for their greater power needs, and also additional tonnage for extra storage against the uncertaintie

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Coal in the Union of South Africa - Supply Adequate for Domestic and Export Demand, With Large Undeveloped Reserves

    By Sidney H. Haughton

    WHEN the white pioneers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries advanced from the coastal settlements of southern Africa into the interior of the subcontinent, they found it inhabited, more or less

    Jan 1, 1945