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  • AIME
    Personal (dfdb9db5-54d8-4fe2-8e1b-65b0b7b4c790)

    (Members are urged to send in for this column any notes of interest concerning themselves or their fellow-members.) Members and guests who registered at Institute headquarters during the period May

    Jan 7, 1914

  • AIME
    Mexican Paper - Recent Geological Phenomena in the "Telluride Quadrangle" of the U. S. Geological Survey in Colorado

    By H. C. Lay

    No one who knows the conditions of altitude, difficulty of access, shortness of working-season, etc., under which the work of the U. S. Geological Survey in the Rocky Mountains is carried on, can fail

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Factors Controlling the Capacity of Rock Crushers (with Discussion)

    By Ernest A. Hersam

    The rate of output of a rock crusher is based upon a certain space relation, the calculation requiring that the size and position of the jaws, the principle of motion, and the speed of the machine be

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Factors Controlling the Capacity of Rock Crushers (with Discussion)

    By Ernest A. Hersam

    The rate of output of a rock crusher is based upon a certain space relation, the calculation requiring that the size and position of the jaws, the principle of motion, and the speed of the machine be

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Strain Measurement on Wires at High Temperature (TN)

    By T. Price, H. A. Holl, A. P. Greenough, A

    UdIN, Shaler, and ulff' first used wires for the determination of the surface energy of a solid metal. A gage length was marked by tying knots in the wires, which were then suspended in a cylinde

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Wet Magnetic Separation Of Oxidized Semitaconites

    By J. Hall Carpenter, James E. Lawver

    Shortly after the passage of the Taconite Amendment in Minnesota, several mining companies announced their intention to build new magnetite taconite plants and another announced its intention to augme

    Jan 9, 1965

  • AIME
    Petroleum Development and Production in the Future

    By V. H. Wilhelm

    WITH rapidly diminishing oil reserves: a great percentage of which are uneconomical at present prices, some of the existing methods of development and production will have to undergo radical re- visio

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Factors Affecting Investment in South American Mining - Chile

    By NEWTON B. KNOX

    CHILEAN mining in the public mind is rightly associated with copper. Chuquicamata with its great hill of copper-bearing granodiorite as well as Sewell and Potrerillos with mineralized volcanic necks t

    Jan 1, 1945

  • 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
    Reservoir Engineering - General - Numerical Methods of Higher-Order Accuracy for Diffusion-Convection Equations

    By H. S. Price, J. C. Cavendish, R. S. Varga

    A numerical formulation of bigh-order accuracy, based on variational methods, is proposed for the solution of multidimensional diffusion-convection-type equations. Accurate solutions are obtained with

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Chromium Alloys

    By Becket, Frederick M.

    CHROMIUM is but one hundred and thirty years of age-a mere youngster as related to many metals that' have speeded world progress. It was Vauquelin of France who proved conclusively that the so ca

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    A Peculiar Type Of Intercrystalline Brittleness Of Copper

    By Henry Rawdon

    THE following note describing the behavior of copper under rather unusual conditions is offered here for its suggestiveness rather than as a complete study of the question. The examinations described

    Jan 2, 1920

  • AIME
    29. Multiple Intrusion and Mineralization at Climax, Colorado

    By David C. Jonson, W. Bruce MacKenzie, Arthur A. Bookstrom, Vaughn E. Surface, Neil K. Muncaster, Stewart R. Wallace

    In mid-Tertiary time a wet silici-alkalic magma penetrated the Precambrian rocks of what is now the Tenmile Range of Central Colorado and formed the Climax Stock. The stock is a composite one and was

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Board Of Directors

    Meeting, June 26, 1913).-On the petition of 29 members residing in and near San Francisco, Cal., the San Francisco Local Section was established. The territory of the St. Louis Local Section was esta

    Jan 7, 1913

  • AIME
    New Economics in Oil Production

    By Thomas, J. Elmer

    WHEN the price of crude oil was advanced on July 26, 1928, with some 4,000,000 bbl. daily of potential production shut in under proration regulations, and with as much more new production shortly avai

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Underground Space For American Industry

    By GEORGE A. KIERSCH

    The awesome destructive power of known and projected weapons of war presages a new need for geologists and engineers, who may be called upon to locate vital industry underground, thereby protecting it

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Important Mining Methods Reviewed

    By Scott Turner

    PRESIDENT SCOTT TURNER officiated as chairman of the opening session on mining methods, Monday morning, Feb. 15. The first paper was that of Max H. Barber on open-pit mining in the Lake Superior distr

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Discussion, Extractive Metallurgy Division, San Francisco Meeting, February 1949

    A. A. CENTER*—This paper reminds me of the beginning of the work of the Electrolytic Zinc Company of Australasia. Early work for this Company, as some of you may know, was done at the Bully Hill Pl

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Superorganizing Professional Engineers

    By A. B. Parsons

    AN often repeated criticism of the profession of engineering is that it is as a whole it lacks solidarity. organization, co-ordination, and leadership. Significantly, the critic, are all engineers. Ot

    Jan 1, 1943