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  • AIME
    The Traveling Grate - Updraft Hardening Specular - Hematite Pellets

    By Donald C. Violetta

    LIMITATIONS of the sintering process as applied to the agglomeration of fine iron-ore concentrates are related directly to the sizes and aggregating properties of the ore particles. A normal sintering

    Jan 3, 1958

  • AIME
    Hardness Changes Accompanying The Ordering Of Beta Brass

    By Cyril Stanley Smith

    BETA brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, but at low temperatures [ ] an ordered structure is stabl

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Abrasive Efficiency of Corundum

    By W. H. Emerson

    In the summer of 1894, a specimen of corundum from Acworth, Ga., which mas reputed to be of markedly inferior quality for the manufacture of corundum-wheels, was received by the Geological Survey of G

    Jan 1, 1900

  • AIME
    The Ertsberg: A Case History of Mine Development

    By Forbes K. Wilson

    Dick Hunt is known for having said, "Ore bodies are found but mines are made." This was certainly true of the Ertsberg-it was stumbled upon, literally, by a group of mountain climbers, but to develop

    Jan 6, 1977

  • AIME
    Fresh-water Diatomite in the Pacific Coast Region

    By Henry Mulryan

    DIATOMS are microscopic aquatic plants of the order Bacillariaceae. They are unicellular plants with skeletons made up of amorphous opaline silica. The skeletons show highly ornate, complicated geomet

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    The Recovery Of Pyrite From Coal Mine Refuse

    By David R. Mitchell

    THE mineral pyrite (or marcasite) occurs in coal beds as balls, lenses, veinlets and bands. Several million tons are wasted annually on the refuse dumps from coal mining and coal-preparation activitie

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    New Industrial Mineral Mines In The Northern Circumpacific

    By John R. Burger

    Industrial mineral mines that have recently been opened, or soon will be opened in the northern circumpacific will produce potash in Canada, Mexico, and Thailand; phosphate in the US, Mexico, and Colo

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    The Brown Coals Of Utah And Adjoining Territories

    By H. Engelmann

    THE very extensive development of a brown coal formation, in the region of the Rocky Mountains, is well known to all of you. The existence of these coals was known years ago, but they were of no pract

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    What Automatic Controls Can The Mill Operator Use?

    By James E. Lawver

    A SURVEY of Minerals Beneficiation Div. membership indicated genuine interest in automatic process control, but revealed that the average mill is operating with a minimum of self-regulating devices. A

    Jan 10, 1953

  • AIME
    Florida Stakes Its Claim in the Uranium Market

    By John W. Sweeney

    Florida is blessed with some of the worlds greatest phosphate rock deposits, and doubly blessed in that those deposits are uraniferous. Until recently, the uranium con¬tained in phosphate rock had bee

    Jan 9, 1979

  • AIME
    More Rock Per Dollar From the MacIntyre Pit

    By F. R. Jones

    T Tahawus, N. Y., National Lead Co. operates the MacIntyre development. Here the world's largest titanium mine produces 5200 long tons of ore per day and pours 8000 long tons of waste rock over i

    May 1, 1956

  • AIME
    21. The Upper Mississippi Valley Base-Metal District

    By Allen V. Heyl

    This old district is a major zinc and lead source and minor copper and barite source. Ores are chiefly in the Galena Dolomite and in limestones and dolomites of the Decorah and Platteville Formations,

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Production and Reserves of the Pittsburgh Coal Bed

    By George Ashley

    IT has been said that the Pittsburgh bed is the most valuable single mineral deposit yet known to man. The figures in Table 1 are presented in substantiation of that claim. TABLE 1.-Pittsburgh Coal B

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Breaking Bottlenecks at the Face With Continuous Haulage

    By William D. Mayercheck

    Introduction of continuous mining machines in the late 1940s created a new production bottleneck in room-and-pillar sections-the shuttle car. While continuous miners could cut and load coal at a nearl

    Jan 7, 1979

  • AIME
    Modernization - An Answer to the Cement Industry's Dilemma

    By A. H. Tousley

    Current problems in the cement industry are discussed and suggestions for solving them by modernization are made. Cement facility modernization is discussed in considerable detail with examples illust

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Washington Survey - New Moves In The Cleanup Campaign

    By Freeman Bishop

    Quietly picking his way through the thorny thicket of conservation issues is William E. Ruckelshaus, director of the Environmental Protection Agency in which President Nixon gathered the various anti-

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    Concerning The Differences In Guns And Their Sizes.

    BEFORE I go any farther, I wish to show you the different kinds of guns, as I have been able to understand them from the finished works, for no one is found to have written or spoken of this. To my kn

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Raw Materials Preparation at The Brandon Plant, Mississippi

    By J. C. Holm

    Although the main constituents of Portland cement are the oxides of calcium, silicon, aluminum, and iron, characteristics of the cement are seriously affected by such contaminants in the raw materials

    Jul 1, 1956

  • AIME
    The Application Of Centrifugal Forces To Gravitational Classifiers

    By Robert C. Emmett, Donald A. Dahlstrom

    FOR many years gravitational classification has been employed as a basic tool in beneficiation of minerals and coal. While improvements have been made to increase efficiency and fields of application,

    Jan 10, 1953

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Cerium-Copper System

    By P. A. Tucker, T. B. Rhinehammer, D. E. Etter, J. E. Selle

    The Ce-Cu phase diagram was investigated by differential thermal analysis and rnetallography. Two congruent melting compounds, CeCu2 (817°C) and CeCua (938°C), and three incongruent cornpounds, CeCu (

    Jan 1, 1964