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  • AIME
  • AIME
    Mercury: Its Uses and Usefulness

    By A. V. UDELL

    OF all the metals that have from time to time been called the "Wonder Metal," mercury, often called quicksilver, is probably the most deserving of this designation. A wonder metal it must have been to

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Alluvial Tin Mining In Malaya

    By A. D. Hughes

    A relatively small area in Malaya, about 200 miles long by 40 miles wide, is the most important source of tin in the world. Some tin is recovered in other parts of the peninsula. Of the tin mined, 98

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Wartime Price Control of Copper, Lead, Zinc

    By JOHN D. SUMMER

    THE Premium Price Plan for copper, lead, and represent, the approach of the Office of Price Administration to the urgent of wartime problem of securing increased output of nonferrous metals. Some of t

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Slovenliness (240628c2-5eff-4604-a247-d0b763cb47b1)

    By T. A. Rickard

    Slovenliness is as reprehensible in words as in clothes. Much writing that we recognize as poor in style is merely sloppy. Just as some students postpone the necessary shave or forget to change their

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    FMC Corporation's North Carolina Phosphate Research Project

    By Lewis Robert M.

    The importance of phosphate in feeding the people of the world has been recognized by mining companies as they continue their search for new ore deposits and ways of improving phosphate production. An

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Slope Instability at Inspiration's Mines

    By James P. Savely, Victor L. Kastner

    Inspiration Consolidated Copper Company is currently mining in four pit areas; Live Oak, Red Hill, Thornton and Joe Bush Extension, near Globe, Arizona. Small satellite orebodies lying outside the mai

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals Record Progress Over a Wide Front

    By Oliver Bowles

    GLASS razor blades, glass chairs, and marble window panes attest that creative genius was still active in 1935. Many less striking, though doubtless more important, developments are to be recorded for

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    The Coal Industry and Its Personnel Relations ? More Recognition of the Workman Needed In the Postwar Period

    By J. J. Foster

    MOST of us will, I think, agree that never before in the history of the coal industry has the human side of our business been so important as today. Since, even in wholly mechanized mining, labor cost

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Biographical Notices of 1903

    By AIME AIME

    THE following paragraphs, constituting the concluding portion of the Annual Report of the Council for 1903, have been withheld from publication until now, in order to make them as accurate and complet

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    The Mass Spectrometer as an Analytical Tool - What It Is, How It Works, and What It Can Do

    By A. Keith Brewer

    RECENT advances in the fields of chemistry, biology, and metallurgy have confronted the analytical chemist with an entirely new set of problems. Development of plastics and synthetics has brought abou

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    The Aluminum Industry

    By Philip D. Wilson

    FEAST and famine-or, chronologically, famine and feast-have characterized the aluminum supply program during 1943. Fortunately for the war effort the famine phase is over and aluminum production is no

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    World Minerals ? War and Postwar ? Wartime Problems Met by the Government ? Private Industry Will Have Changed Conditions to Meet

    By Alan M. Bateman

    POSSIBLE postwar trends of the more important world minerals will be determined in part by their present world position and by the acts and forces that have operated during the war period, so it is de

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Water Hazards in the Anthracite Coal Mines of the Lackawanna Valley

    By AIME AIME

    A PAPER recently presented before the Anthracite Section of the A. I. M. E. by S. J. Phil- lips, Mine Inspector, Fifth Anthracite District, Department of Mines of Pennsylvania, covering the water haza

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Reno H. Sales - An Interview By Henry C. Carlisle

    By V. D. Perry

    Carlisle: Reno, let's start off by asking "When was the first day that you began working in your profession?" Sales: I began in Butte, Montana, on August 22, 1900 as an assistant engineer for

    Jan 5, 1966

  • AIME
    Construction

    By T. A. Rickard

    The writing that is effective is woven with a fine texture into an agreeable pattern; it is free from knots, loose threads, and stray fluff. The instrument that weaves this literary fabric, whether it

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Stock Piling - Past, Present, And Future

    By Richard J. Lund

    Stock piling-and by that I mean well-organized stock piling on a substantial scale-is almost as old as the hills themselves. It was back in early Biblical times, as recounted in the Book of Genesis, t

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Mineral Industry Education - Professional Engineers Are Taking Increasing Interest in Professorial Problems

    By Francis A. Thornson

    WITHOUT desiring to perpetrate an Irish bull I think we may safely say that the major developments of the year in mineral industry education have taken place outside of the field itself. I refer to th

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    A Message to Young Engineers

    By D. C. Jackling

    I BESPEAK your indulgence for a brief expression of the views of a patriarch in the field of mineral industry technology relative to young men's problems in that sphere of education and endeavor.

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Employment (1be17645-d87d-4793-b7e1-2db9da0cd858)

    (Under this heading will be published notes sent to the Secretary of the Institute by members or other persons. ) Position in sales department is open for a mining engineer with experience in mine ve

    Jan 11, 1913