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Personnel Service (45a54721-ad61-438d-953d-83b1b04fbc67)THE following employment items are made available to AIME members on a nonprofit basis by the Engineering Societies Personnel Service, Inc., operating in cooperation with the Four Founder Societies. L
Jan 1, 1952
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New York Paper - A Proposed Filter-Press Slimes-PlantBy Francis L. Bosqui
The following paper embodies a report which I made on the filter-press treatment of slimes at the Liberty Bell mine, Telluride, Colo. At the time this report was submitted, the management deemed it wi
Jan 1, 1904
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Coal - Crushing ofAnthracite for Reductionof Domestic to Steam SizesBy P. D. Rao, H. B. Charmbury, D. R. Mitchell
As a result of a changing market pattern for anthracite, there is now an increasing demand for steam size and a decreasing demand for domestic sizes. To help the producer meet this new demand, the aut
Jan 1, 1961
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Shrinkage Stopes - Mining Methods of the Telluride District (with Discussion)By Charles N. Bell
The Telluride mining district of southwestern Colorado is defined by the 37" 45' and 38" parallels of latitude and 107" 45' and 108" meridians of longitude. Telluride was never a boom cam
Jan 1, 1925
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Plant Operation And ControlBy J. S. Johnson, W. C. McCulloch
ALL phases of plant operation must be synchronized so that the number of interruptions in the flow of material may be reduced to a minimum. In the majority of plants operating under a labor agreement,
Jan 1, 1943
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Low-Grade Ore ConcentrationBy R. W. Diamond
Low-grade ores can be designated by two main classifications: (1) simple low-grade ores, and (2) complex low-grade ores. As a rule the first type has a relatively small metal content, although low- gr
Jan 1, 1949
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Mining and Metallurgy - Why Do Few Students Elect Metallurgy?By Charles Y. Clayton
THE general public does not know that there is such a thing as metallurgy and it is very seldom that you see the word metallurgy in print except in technical magazines. Perhaps it is more to the front
Jan 1, 1930
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Editorial - Foreign Minerals - Our SecurityDEPENDENCY on foreign sources for many mineral raw materials is a characteristic of our economy which is becoming painfully evident. Although investment in foreign mining projects has increased, it ha
Jan 1, 1952
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Mineral Industries ImproveBy Arthur Notman
YEAR ago, the Committee on Mineral Economics ventured to predict a more realistic attitude by the public toward the folly of seeking to have more by making less under the guidance of the Blue Eagle. A
Jan 1, 1936
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Helium and Helium Filled AirshipsBy AIME AIME
TRANSFER to the Bureau of Mines of the responsibility for conservation and production of helium, and announcement that a proposal has been made to the President for commercial operation of the Los Ang
Jan 1, 1925
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Personnel ServiceTHE following employment items are made available to AIME on a non-profit basis by the Engineering Societies Personnel Service, Inc., operating in cooperation with the Four Founder Societies. Local of
Jan 1, 1952
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Quicksilver Deposits near Little Missouri River, Southwest ArkansasBy J. C. Reed
CINNABAR was discovered in southwestern Arkansas on Little Missouri River in sec. 1, T.7S., R.26W., in April, 1930, and near Antoine Creek in sec. 28, T.6S., R.23W., some 15 miles farther east in May
Jan 1, 1935
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Minerals Beneficiation - A Kinetic Study of the Leaching of MolybdeniteBy M. E. Wadsworth, W. H. Dresher, W. M. Fassell
HIGH temperature-high pressure techniques have long been used to great advantage in the organic chemical industry, the petroleum industry, and the paper industry. Only recently, however, have these me
Jan 1, 1957
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Producing - Equipment, Methods and Materials - A Method for Calculating Circulating TemperaturesBy H. R. Crawford, P. B. Crawford, A. F. Tragesser
A method has been developed to calculate wellbore temperatures during mud circulation and the actual cementing operation to aid in the design of cement slurries. The method agrees within 10F with prev
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Boron And BoratesBy Robert B. Kistler, Ward C. Smith
The borate industry is one of the few sectors of the mining and mineral-processing industry which the United States still dominates. Since about 1927, the United States has supplied over half of the w
Jan 1, 1983
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Philadelphia Paper - Discussion on Steel Rails. Philadelphia Meeting (65bcba21-aa05-4db5-8261-94b5d1586efc)By August Wendel
weight, and deflection, and recommends that the Pennsylvania Railroad Company denland that rails be made on specifications, based on these six variables, so narrow, that to fill them would cause the c
Jan 1, 1881
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Use of Pulverized Coal as Fuel for Open-hearth Furnaces Melting Steel for CastingsBy Joseph Kittredge
AT the time this matter first came up in 1912, the National Malleable and Steel Castings Co. had seven basic-bottom open-hearth furnaces in its plant at Sharon, Pa., using fuel oil, then costing about
Jan 1, 1939
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The Status of Permitting for a Uranium Mine or MillBy Eric A. Nordhausen
A good deal of dialogue has been published and voiced concerning one mining regulation or another, that, according to those raising the issues, in effect shuts down or drastically reduces mine and/or
Jan 1, 1980
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The 1957 Jackling Lecture - A Geologist Looks At Industrial MineralsBy Joseph L. Gillson
YOUR speaker has long sought an opportunity to review the many differences between the subject matter called economic geology and the duties of a practicing economic geologist. As the subject was taug
Jan 5, 1957