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  • AIME
    The Drift Of Things (5b6c8442-5a64-4728-bd07-4108c8c42dc3)

    By Edward H. Robie

    THOUGH the final figures are not available as this is written, it seems certain that the Institute accounts will show $7000 to $8000 surplus for the year 1951. This is the first time this has happene

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Part IV – April 1968 - Papers - The Deformation Characteristics of Textured Magnesium

    By W. F. Hosford, E. W. Kelley

    By testing polycrystalline specimens from textured plates which had Previously been used to provide materials for growing single crystals, it has been possible to relate the plastic anisotropy of text

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Product Research and Trends in the Steel Industry

    By A. B. Kinzel

    IT has often been stated that the steel industry did no research or development work in the decades preceding 1920. If restricted to organized research on the quality and field of application of struc

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    The Mica Veins of North Carolina

    By W. C. Kerr

    A BRIEF sketch only is here intended, with a few illustrations, in order to give a general notion of the character and structure of these veins. I have stated elsewhere, several years ago, that these

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Leaching Experiments On The Ajo .Ores

    By Stuart Croasdale

    NOT long ago I was called upon to conduct some experiments on the treatment of ores from the New Cornelia copper mine, Ajo mountains, Arizona, for the Calumet & Arizona Copper Co. The problem was a ve

    Jan 8, 1914

  • AIME
    Soap Flotation of the Nonsulfides

    By Will H. Coghill

    FLOTATION has been so closely allied with the sulfide minerals and their early and associated oily reagents that the term "oil flotation" has erroneously been applied to the entire flotation process.

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Geophysics - AFMAG: A New Airborne Electromagnetic Prospecting Method

    By S. H. Ward

    Since the advent of the first airborne electromagnetic system, it has been evident that such systems were inherently limited to shallow depths of exploration of the orderof 100 to 200 feet. Hence in 1

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Copper Queen (THE PORPHYRY COPPERS)

    PORPHYRY mining in the Bisbee district in Arizona did not begin until 1923, though Bisbee had been the scene of profitable copper-mining operations since 1880, and during the interval had contributed

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    The Oil Fields of Persia

    By Campbell Hunter

    PETROLEUM is found in almost every province in Persia. On the northern frontier, along the southern shore of the Caspian Sea, it is found near Anzelli and Shakhtesar and gas at Khoremabad. Oil is also

    Jan 2, 1920

  • AIME
    The Concentration of Iron-Ores.

    Discussion of the paper of N. V. Hansell, presented at the Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912, and published in Bulletin No. 72, December, 1912, pp. 1497 to 1,517. C. Q. PAYNE, New York (communication

    Jan 3, 1913

  • AIME
    The Torsional Theory Of Joints

    By George F. Becker

    Complexity of Rock-Fractures. - The strains to which rocks have been subjected are manifestly very complex, and it is entirely safe to presume that every possible node of deformation and rupture is ex

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Electric Motor in Mining Operation

    By George W. Mansfield

    My plan in this paper is, first, to prove three general points, and then to take up the specific applications of the electric motor to nining work. The three poinb are: 1. The electric system is th

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Spokane Paper - The Ruble Hydraulic Elevator

    By J. McD. Porter

    In many of the old placer-mining districts are still to be found large tracts of gold-bearing gravel not suitable to be worked with a dredge, because the bed is too shallow or the gulch too narrow. Fr

    Jan 1, 1910

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Determination of Manganese in Spiegel

    By G. C. Stone

    IN common with many members of the Institute, I was much interested in Mr. Kent's paper on " Manganese Determinations in Steel," * read at the Virginia meeting. Having recently had an opportunity

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    The Measurement And Interpretation Of Cementation Rate Data

    By P. H. Strickland, F. Lawson

    It is now well established that in the majority of cementation processes used industrially, the rate of reaction can be described in terms of the mass transport from the bulk of the solution to the de

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    Philadelphia Paper - The Calorific Value of Western Lignite

    By R. W. Raymond

    The important question of the metallurgical value of the coals of the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Coast is to be settled, of course, by practical experiment. Meanwhile, as I have had occasion to p

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Pyritic Smelting in the Black Hills

    By Franklin R. Carpenter

    Pyritic smelting, so-called, as practiced in the Black Hills is pyritic smelting only in the sense that Dr. John Percy uses the expression in his " Metallurgy of Silver," where he describes a process

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The Occurrence and Treatment of the Argentiferous Manganese Ores of Tombstone District, Arizona

    By C. W. Goodale

    As an appendix to the above-mentioned paper, a drawing of the vertical projection of the Knoxville mine workings is here given. In my paper it was stated that the ore-chimneys are found along a cra

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    Schuylkill Valley Paper - The Tale Industry of the Governeur District. St. Lawrence County, New York

    By Axel Sahlin

    The day is long past when linen and cotton rags were the exclusive raw material of the paper-trade. Wood-fiber, chemically or mechanically prepared, straw, hemp and Esparto grass have largely supplied

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    The Effect Of The Presence Of A Small Amount Of Copper In Medium-Carbon Steel

    By Carle Hayward

    THE effect of copper on steel has been studied by numerous investigators. Before modern testing methods had been developed, blacksmiths noted red shortness in iron, the cause for which was ascribed to

    Jan 1, 1918