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  • AIME
    Technical Advance on the Mesabi Iron Range

    By Rztssell H. Bennett

    A SURVEY of the Mesabi Range iron-ore industry demonstrates that a satisfactory degree of technical progress has been achieved in the last fifteen years. This advance has not been made over a uniform

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - The Domestic Graphite Supply Problem

    By E. N. Cameron

    GRAPHITE has been included in U. S. lists of strategic minerals since the problem of mineral deficiencies was revealed during World War I. Since 1918 the domestic graphite industry has led a precariou

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Less Common Elements in the Electrical Industry

    By Fuller, T. S.

    THE number of rare or uncommon elements in use in the electrical industry nowadays is large, their application having come about through investigational work in industrial search laboratories and &apo

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Hardinge Conical Mill

    By H. W. Hardings

    Nearly every mining and metallurgical engineer will recall his early experience and method of producing step- or stage-reduction in preparing ore-samples for assay, in which he employecl idea, step- o

    Jan 1, 1914

  • AIME
    PART VI - Papers - The Plutonium-Lanthanum System

    By K. A. Johnson, F. H. Ellinger, C. C. Land

    The Pu-La alloy systenz has been studied by thertnal, tnzcrographic, and X-ray diffraction methods. It is churacterized by a liquid miscibility gap, a maximum solubility of about 20 ut. pct PM in y la

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Copper Smelting: Which Way In The Future?

    By F. L. Holderreed

    A choosy in what they would smelt. The furnace charge had to be coarse, and it had to be rich. They discarded fines in excess of about 1/10 the total weight. They wanted 10% copper content and fussed

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Uses of Coal in the Ceramic Industry

    By H. E. Nold

    THE raw materials of the ceramic industry are mostly clays. This raw material is ground, water is added and the mixture pugged into a moist, plastic, rather stiff mass. From this mass the desired unit

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Inclined Mine Shaft Sunk In The Adirondacks

    By Fred W. Stiefel

    To open the Fisher Hill mine of the Republic Steel Corporation, it was necessary to sink an inclined shaft into the rock and excavate stations, drifts, and ore pockets. This inclined shaft, or slope,

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Rejuvenating the Golden Chariot Property in Idaho

    By R. S. McClellan

    DURING the last year or so, with higher prices for gold and silver, many old properties in the West have come back to life. Almost every profitable producer in the old days has been considered, and th

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    The Condensation Of Zinc From Its Vapor

    By Charles Fulton

    The study of the condensation of zinc from its vapor was undertaken to shed light on certain problems encountered in large-scale electric zinc-furnace work recently conducted. It is a matter of common

    Jan 8, 1918

  • AIME
    Pittsburg Paper - The Chemical Control of Slimes

    By Harrison Everett Ashley

    Slimes are usually defined as all material passing a certain sized sieve, which is invariably the finest sieve employed by each metallurgist in his tests; 100-mesh and 200-mesh have been taken as the

    Jan 1, 1911

  • AIME
    The Utah Copper Plan for Rotating Employment

    By J. G. Hadley

    IN THE early stages of the depression the Utah Copper Co. realized that an unemployment problem would he created which demanded an intelligent and sympathetic solution. The company recognized that as

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Industrial Representation in the Standard Oil Co.

    By Clarence Hicks

    THE labor policy, of the Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey) is founded. first of all on paying at least the prevailing scale of wages in the community; on, the eight-hour day, with time and one-half for ov

    Jan 3, 1920

  • AIME
    Off-Highway Trucks in the Mining Industry

    By Alan K. Burton

    An industry-wide demand for bigger and more efficient trucks, with their supposed economies of scale, is well established. Some trucks have been, and often are brought "off the shelf," with the manufa

    Jan 8, 1975

  • AIME
    Production And Properties Of The Commercial Magnesias

    By Max Y. Seaton

    THE scope of this paper will be limited to finished materials that contain a large preponderance (around 80 per cent or more) of magnesium oxide. The large and commercially important production of ref

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Albany Paper - The Box Electric Rock-Drill

    By Frank E. Shepard

    Electric power in mining-operations is now successfully applied to haulage, hoisting, lighting and pumping; and until lately, drilling was the one department of mining in which an electric source of e

    Jan 1, 1904

  • AIME
    How to Use the Engineering Societies Library

    By Ralph H. Phelps

    WHAT information do you have on precision investment casting? Please send me all available information on the removal of paraffin from oil wells and pipe lines. How can I find out how to remove magnes

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Hydrothermal Alteration at the Climax Molybdenum Deposit

    By Robert U. King, John W. Vanderwilt

    THE Climax molybdenite deposit in Lake County 100 miles southwest of Denver is located in the central part of the mineral belt extending north-easterly across the state. Principal geographic features

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Tulsa Again the Mecca of Oil Men

    By AIME AIME

    THE Seventh International Petroleum Exposition and Congress to be held in Tulsa, Okla., Oct. 4 to 11, inclusive, in true western spirit promises to be bigger and better than ever. The Exposition has b

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Roanoke, Va. Paper - The Langdon Gas-producer

    By N. M. Langdon

    ON account of its greater economy and cleanliness, and the extent to which iuferior fuels can be utilized for its generation, there has been of late a rapidly increasing tendency to substitute gaseous

    Jan 1, 1884