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  • AIME
    Other Schools

    IT is difficult to judge how much influence the success attained during its first year, 186465, by the School of Mines at Columbia had on developments in education for the mineral industry elsewhere i

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    Review Of Coal-Dust Investigations

    By George Rice

    TEN years ago, October, 1914, the author had the privilege of giving an-illustrated address on investigations of coal-dust explosions1 to this Institute at one session of its fall meeting in Pittsburg

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    Papers - Non-Metalic Minerals - Fluorspar Deposits in Western United States (With Discussion)

    By Ernest F. Burchard

    Fluorspar is found in most of the states from the Rocky Mountains westward, and commercial production of the mineral has been reported from Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Washington.

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Bearing Of Price Upon Oil Reserve

    By Joseph Pogue

    IT IS well known that one of the cornerstones of economic theory is the so-called law of supply and demand, which, really, is a group of economic laws, one of which may be succinctly stated : A rise i

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Cobalt on Carbon Activity and Diffusivity in Steel

    By E. J. Dulis, V. K. Chandhok, J. P. Hirth

    Cobalt clearly increased the activity of carbon in austenite and in ferrite. This effect of cobalt on carbon activity Plausibly accounted for the effect of cobalt on accelerating the austenite to pe

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Behavior Of Closely Jointed Rock

    By J. C. Jaeger

    It frequently happens in engineering and mining situations that "bad" rock is encountered which consists of rock broken up into blocks a few inches or less in diameter by a network of intersecting joi

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Remelting Secondary Aluminum

    By D. B. Hobbs, H. O. Burrows, T. D. Stay

    ALUMINUM which has lost its original identity as to source may be considered as secondary. This would include scrap originating in the fabrication of aluminum, which is not consumed at the plant of fa

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Technical Papers and Notes - Institute of Metals Division - Creation of Cleavage Steps by Dislocation

    By J. J. Gilman

    WHEN a cleavage crack that is moving through a crystal intersects a screw dislocation, a jog is created in the crack front. As the crack continues to move, the jog leaves behind a cleavage step. This

    Jan 1, 1959

  • AIME
    New York Secondary Metals - Remelting Secondary Aluminum

    By D. B. Hobbs, H. O. Burrows, T. D. Stay

    Aluminum which has lost its original identity as to source may be considered as secondary. This would include scrap originating in the fabrication of aluminum, which is not consumed at the plant of fa

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Direct Reduction of Iron Ores Containing Phosphorus

    By K. L. Komarek

    Based on theoretical and experimental evidence a discussion follows of the behavior of phosphorus -bearing iron ores in the R-N Direct Reduction Process and suggestions are made of methods of reducing

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    From Falling Creek To Zug Island

    By M. O. Holowaty, C. M. Squarcy

    Bituminous coal furnaces give way to coke, and by 1880, the American iron and steel industry was growing at a tremendous rate. In the twentieth century, the number of operating blast furnaces was cut

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    Rock Failure Under Concentrated Loading

    By B. Ladanyi

    The problem of rock behavior under concentrated loadings has been the subject of a number of studies in the past and has been receiving increasing attention by rock mechanics investigators in recent y

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Part VII - Hydrostatic Pressure-Induced Deformation of Polycrystalline Zinc

    By S. H. Gelles

    Samples of poly crystalline zinc of 99.999+ pct purity were observed metallographically after having been exposed to hydrostatic pressures of up to 27 kbars. The deforrnation produced by this treatmen

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Sound Steel Ingots. A Discussion

    Chairman James F. Kemp :—I call upon Prof. Albert Sau-veur to open the general discussion on the subject of sound steel ingots. Albert Sauveur, Cambridge, Mass.:—I believe that I have the privilege

    Jan 1, 1914

  • AIME
    New Haven Paper - Vanadium-Deposits in Peru

    By D. Foster Hewett

    The scope of this paper is the description of two districts in Peru in which deposits of vanadium have been found, and the consideration of much laboratory-work that I and others have done to determin

    Jan 1, 1910

  • AIME
    Oxide Films on Iron

    By Robert Mehl

    PART I. ORIENTATION RELATIONSHIPS IN OXIDE LAYERS Oriented overgrowths and intergrowths among both metallic and nonmetallic substances have been recognized and studied for well over a century. The wo

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Gas-Producer Practice At Western Zinc Plants

    By G. S. Brooks

    WITH the gradual depletion of the natural-gas pools of the Kansas district, together with the uncertainty of further cheap fuel developments, some. of the western zinc companies turned to the coal fie

    Jan 9, 1919

  • AIME
    Zeolites

    By Richard H. Olson

    "Rarely in our technological society does the discovery of a new class of inorganic materials result in such a wide scientific interest and kaleidoscopic development of applications as has happened wi

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    Notes On An Iron-Ore Deposit Near Hong-Kong, China

    By C. M. Weld

    The southeastern coast of China, from Ning-Po to .Macao, represents an element in the continental mass of Asia which has at practically all times in the remote past exhibited a tendency to rise rather

    Jan 2, 1914

  • AIME
    Magnesium Chloride From Naturally Occurring Brines and Evaporites

    By A. F. Nylander, J. H. Jensen

    Magnesium, in its combined forms, is the sixth most abundant element and the third most abundant metal in the earth's crust, but it is so reactive that it is never found in nature in the elementa

    Jan 11, 1964