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  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Fatigue Behavior of Hydrogen-Charged Tantalum (TN)

    By B. A. Wilcox

    ThERE are several reports in the literature which indicate that both solid-solution hydrogen and hydride precipitates can promote low-temperature em-brittlement of tantalum.1-3 For example, Imgram et

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Refractory Design Increases Rotary Kiln Efficiency

    By W. F. Rochow, W. C. Burke

    Numerous designs of linings and accessories, including dams, lifters, and heat exchangers, contribute greatly to kiln efficiencies. Greater conductivity is achieved with basic brick than with fireclay

    Jan 3, 1955

  • AIME
    French Mineral Position

    By Charles Will Wright

    FRANCE will be given a large portion of the Marshall Plan funds for relief, reconstruction, and industrial development in France and in her colonial possessions. At present that country is not in posi

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Annual Meeting of the Canadian Mining Institute

    By AIME AIME

    THE twenty-second annual meeting of the Canadian Mining Institute was held at the King Edward Hotel, Toronto, on Mar. 8, 9, and 10, and was followed on the 11th by an all-day excursion to the Internat

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    No Real Scarcity of Lead Likely

    By Francis H. Brownell

    During the 1920's lead consumption in the United States reached the highest average total ever known. For the ten-year period 1921-'30, it was slightly over 600,000 tons per year, or say 50,

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Research Work Progressing on a Wide Variety of Coal Problems?Money Easier to Get Than Men

    By E. R. Kaiser

    ACTIVITY on long-range and on immediate wartime problems shared the attention of specialists in coal research during 1943. Programs of the principal coal laboratories were more adequately financed tha

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Nonmetallic Industries

    By Samuel H. Dolbear

    NOT WITHSTANDING the extremely low ebb of business activity, the nonmetallic industries have fared somewhat better than some other branches of mining. The average price level in nonmetallics, although

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Small Business and Big Business in Mining

    By Louis Ware

    BEFORE the war we often heard the term "Big Business." And there were complaints of the ills and abuses attributed to bigness in business. Although there were examples where the small businessmen spok

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Zinc-Its Supply and Demand in the United States

    By Howard I. Young

    WHEN so many statements are being made relative to the requirements of zinc metal, it is difficult for some of us who are acquainted with the industry to visualize how it is possible to step up produc

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Ground Movement and Subsidence, 1929

    By George S. Rice

    THE year 1929 has shown a surprising growth in the attention given by mining men to the subject of ground movement and subsidence from mining, as evidenced by the large number of articles that have ap

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Subsidies for Mine Production

    By Evan Just

    DIRECT subsidies for mine production in this country began as an outgrowth of wartime 'price regulation. The price-fixing authorities realized that the volume of production to be required from do

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Strip Mining

    By K. R. Bixby

    OPENING of numerous stripping operations in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and other districts, particularly outside the Middle West and Southwest where the large-scale stripping mines predominate, holds the lim

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Nuclear Detector For Beryllium Minerals

    By T. Cantwell, N. C. Rasmussen, H. E. Hawkes

    Beryl is a mineral that may be difficult to distinguish from quartz by casual field inspection. The easily recognized green color and hexagonal crystal form of coarse-grained beryl are by no means uni

    Jan 9, 1959

  • AIME
    55. Geology of the Spar Mountain Beryllium District, Utah

    By Daniel R. Shawe

    Large tabular beryllium deposits in waterlaid rhyolitic tuff at Spor Mountain, Utah, contain the world's largest known resources of beryllium (as bertrandite). The district also has produced fluorspar

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Bridgeport Paper - Discussion of Mr. Firmstone's paper on magnesia and sulphur in blast-furnace cinder (see p. 498)

    E. K. Landis, Philadelphia, Pa. (communication to the Secretary) : Mr. Firmstone's paper is of great interest; but he has unfortunately otnitted to state the most important point, viz., the perce

    Jan 1, 1895

  • AIME
    Water-Chief Problem in Anthracite Mining

    By S. H. Ash

    IN no part of the world other than a small area in Pennsylvania is anthracite mining an industry of major magnitude. As the deposits of anthracite in the United States are limited virtually to Pennsyl

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Pyrometry And Steel Manufacture

    By A. H. Miller

    TEMPERATURE considerations are of prime importance in the manufacture of steel products-front the time the metal is produced in the melting furnace, where the chemical reactions have a direct dependen

    Jan 8, 1919

  • AIME
    Long-Term Economic Planning System And Methods In The USSR's Mining Industries

    By Yu A. Chernegov

    Building up the USSR's economic strength was the result of all the achievements and successes of our economy. The Soviet Union was the first to begin planned guidance of the economy. The mini

    Jan 1, 1977

  • AIME
    New Helium Plants of the Bureau of Mines ? Five Plants Can Now Supply 25 Times the Prewar Output

    By H. P. Wheeler

    WHEN Germany invaded Poland in September, 1939, the only operating helium plant in the United States was that near Amarillo. Texas, supplied with helium-bearing natural gas from the near-by Cliffside

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Silver Stabilization

    By JOHN JANNEY

    STABILIZATION of the adjustment of normal consumption to normal production of world commodities is quite different from reducing production until visible surpluses are consumed. The first means resto

    Jan 1, 1931