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  • AIME
    Washoe Reduction Works---Washoe Smelter

    "The Washoe Smelter is situated about two miles east of the City of Anaconda. The smelter site includes about 240 acres and peculiarly adapts itself in topography to the efficient handling of material

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Instrument to Determine Uniaxial Stress in Short Rock Columns

    By John E. Willson, Ben L. Seegmiller

    A portable electronic instrument was designed and constructed to detect unknown stress magnitudes in rocks. The principle used to detect stress is based on the propagation velocity method. This method

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Managing The Wealth Of United States Minerals

    By David C. Russell

    The Department of the Interior used to be a quiet, noncontroversial, almost boring agency. It, after all is the fifth oldest of the Departments, and as an old line Federal agency it has studiously per

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    The Constitution And Melting-Points Of A Series Of Copper-Slags.

    By Charles H. Fulton

    (Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) I. INTRODUCTION. THERE are comparatively few accurate data on the melting-or the freezing-point temperature of metallurgical slays, or on related physical phenome

    Dec 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Arsenic Production from Non-Ferrous Smelting

    By A. B. Young

    THERE were produced in this country in 1923 probably in the neighborhood of 12,000 or 13,000 tons of refined and crude arsenic, by far the greater portion coming as a by product of smelting operations

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Life at a Cyprus Copper Mine

    By Victor G. Hills

    CONTRARY to what seems to be the general impression, the island of Cyprus was not named for the metal copper, but the reverse was the case. The origin of the name is entirely lost. The ancient city Ki

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Milwaukee Paper - Symposium on the Conservation of Tin: The Cadmium Supply of the United States (with Discussion)

    By C. E. Siebenthal

    produce attractive and consequently more salable products. It would seem, however, that if solder and babbitt were cast in closed molds, just as good practical results would be obtained by the user, w

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    25. The Mesabi Iron Range, Minnesota

    By J. S. Owens, R. W. Marsden, J. W. Emanuelson, R. F. Werner, N. E. Walker

    The iron ores of the Mesabi Range occur in a 340 to 750-foot thick, Precambrian cherty iron formation termed "taconite." For about 65 years, extensive natural iron ore bodies were mined, and the ores

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - Iron Alloys with Special Reference to Manganese Steel

    By R. H. Hadfield

    Professor ArnolD, of the Sheffield Technical School, who has done so much excellent work in metallurgical research, recently produced, with the aid of aluminum, a sound ingot and bar from the purest k

    Jan 1, 1894

  • AIME
    Combined Carbon-A Controlling Factor in Quality of Basic Pig Iron (63aef6ea-6f94-4b37-90a2-8c229e2dbb2e)

    By Ralph Sweetser

    AT the joint session of Blast Furnace and Open Hearth Committees, April 7, 1937, at Birmingham, the subject of the quality of basic open-hearth pig iron was so well presented and discussed from so man

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Future of Iron Mining in the Lake Superior District

    By Franklin G. Pardee

    IN 1920 the Minnesota Tax Commission estimated a reserve of 1,341,674,538 long tons of iron ore in Minnesota, the Michigan State Tax Commission report showed 199,092,855 long tons in reserve in that s

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - An Infrared Study of the Flotation of Phenacite with Oleic Acid

    By M. E. Wadswort, A. S. Peck

    Infrared data disclose that phenacite reacts with oleic acid to form a chemisorbed oleate monolayer on the mineral surface. The absorption band characteristic of the antisymmetrical C = 0 oleate struc

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Economic Survey of Bituminous Coal

    By W. A. Forbes

    OUR present-day geological surveys show that 36 of our States are underlain with bituminous coal, covering a total area of 496,709 square miles. The North American continent possesses 69 per cent of t

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Part X - Electromotive-Force and Calorimetric Studies of Thermodynamic Properties of Solid and Liquid Silver-Tin Alloys

    By A. W. H. Morris, G. H. Laurie, J. N. Pratt

    Using- galvanic cells of the form Sn(liq)/Sn" (LiCl-KC1-SnCl,)/Sn-Ag (alloy), measurements have been made of relative thermodynamic properties of the a, C, E, and liquid phases of the Ag-Sn alloy syst

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Recent Developments in Open-Hearth Furnace Design and Operation

    By L. F. Reinartz

    FROM the earliest times when our prehistoric ancestors laboriously fashioned crude tools and weapons from meteoric iron until our day when we manufacture steel in 150-ton open-hearth furnaces, the pro

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Mining Education in West Virginia High Schools

    By C. E. LAWAL

    WITH the object of adapting high-school vocational courses to the industrial needs of the community, a few high-school officials in West -Virginia working with the School of Mines of the State univers

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    Fuels for Truck Haulage

    By A. C. Butterworth

    M OST operators of open-pit mines in the Lake Superior iron ore district are quite familiar with the use of fuel oil in the heavy-duty Diesel engines commonly used in truck-haulage service but some op

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Gas-Producer Power-Plants

    By Samuel S. Wyer

    THE installation of the gas-producer power-plant in America has been so unusual that all engineers have viewed it with in¬terest; a large majority, however, regard it with a lack of con-fidence and ma

    Mar 1, 1905

  • AIME
    The Mineral Position Of The United States

    By Julius Albert Krug

    IN the field of mineral resources, today's problems and those we can reasonably expect in the future are so vast that nothing less than world-wide thinking and world-wide planning will suffice. I

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    The Solid Non-Metallic Impurities In Steel (Sonims).

    By Henry D. Hibbard

    I. INTRODUCTION. THESE impurities are perhaps the most important things in steel-especially steel made by the oxidation processes-the effect of which has not been at least approximately determined. B

    Apr 1, 1911