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  • AIME
    Getting Your Money?s Worth

    By E. H. Rose

    From the more distant members and some not so distant, the plaint is often heard that they cannot justify the expense and time required to attend the AIME Annual Meeting. Almost invariably, the reason

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Rotary Hearth Process For Smelting Lead Ores And Battery Scrap Of Bleiberger Bergwerks Union, A.G. Arnoldstein, Austria

    By Herbert Dlaska

    The BBU - rotary hearth treats lead concentrates and battery scrap by the roast-reaction process. It corresponds in principle to the long-known Newnam hearth, however its hearth-basin is not straight

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - The Effect of Working and Heating Eutectic Structures

    By J. S. Brown, A. G. Guy

    With the exception of the work of Tammann and Hartmann,1 no published information has been found on the structural changes produced in eutectic structures as the result of heating following plastic de

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Requirements Of A Breathing-Apparatus For Use In Mines.

    By Walter E. Mingramm

    THE construction of rescue-apparatus on the principle of furnishing the wearer with air from a tank containing it under high pressure was given up by inventors about 20 years ago. Such an apparatus mu

    Jan 7, 1908

  • AIME
    Nitrogen In Steel, And The Erosion Of Gun

    By H. E. Wheeler

    THE work described was carried out during 1917 and 1918 at the testing laboratory of Watertown Arsenal at the instigation of the Nitrate Division and later with the concurrence of the Cannon Section o

    Jan 4, 1920

  • AIME
    Photoelasticity-Mining Engineer's New Tool

    By AIME AIME

    INSTITUTE members attending the Annual Meeting in New York who want to see one of the mining engineers' newest aids, photoelastic stress analysis, are due for an interesting afternoon on Thursday

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Metallurgical Practice in the Witwatersrand District, South Africa (with Discussion)

    By F. L. Bosqui

    The history of the development of gold metallurgy in South Africa is divisible into two periods: That preceding the introduction of the cyanide process on a commercial scale in 1890; and the 24 years

    Jan 1, 1916

  • AIME
    The Women's Auxiliary

    The meeting of the Institute at St. Louis brought together many members of the Women's Auxiliary, and Mrs. Philip N. Moore, who was nominated as the Director for the St. Louis Section, took the o

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    Rare Earths and Indian Gems Discussed by Tyler and Ball

    By AIME AIME

    TWO papers, "Calcium, Strontium, and Barium Metals," by Charles Hardy and Paul M. Tyler, and "The Mining of Gems and Ornamental Stones by American Indians," by Sydney H. Ball, were presented before th

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AIME
    Papers - Non- metallic Minerals - Government Potash Exploration in Texas and New Mexico (With Discussion)

    By G. R. Mansfield, W. B. Lang

    THE third year of Government exploration for potash by the U. S. Geological Survey and the U. S. Bureau of Mines under the authorization of the act approved June 25, 1926 (Public 424-69th Cong.) is d

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    An Experiment in One-piece Gun Construction

    By P. W. Bridgman

    DURING the war, the Navy undertook the construction, under my direction, of an experimental gun embodying features designed to lessen the cost and time of production. These experiments were initiated

    Jan 2, 1920

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - Preparation of Metallic Titanium by Film Boiling

    By L. A. Bromley, A. W. Petersen

    The van Arkel-deBoer method for producing ductile titanium by thermal decomposition of Til, vapor and deposition on an electrically heated filament is modified by film boiling Til liquid on a heated f

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Electricity

    By Wayne P. Myers

    Electricity, as normally thought of by a layman's definition, is a manmade force that has no color, no odor, is not visible, cannot be heard, yet man can control it and make it perform his work f

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    The Chemical Reaction's in The Bessemer Process, the Charge Containing but a Small Percentage of Manganese

    By Charles F. King

    THE only investigations on record of the reactions occurring during the Bessemer blow are of charges containing a large percentage of manganese, with the exception of two partial analyses by Snelus an

    Jan 1, 1881

  • AIME
    Discussions of Papers Published Prior to July 1960 - Effect of Temperature on Soap Flotation of Iron Ore; AIME Trans, 1960, vol 217, page 76

    By S. R. B. Cooke, Iwao Iwasaki, Hyung Sup Choi

    John Dasher (Materials and Processes Engineer, Crucible Steel Co. of America, Pittsburgh, Pa.) The authors are to be congratulated for their excellent work, dramatic results, and persuasive explanatio

    Jan 1, 1961

  • AIME
    The Production of Mine Timbers

    "The mines of Butte, in addition to the square timber used, consume each year large quantities of round timber, which are called stulls. The Stull business is an important industry, as will be seen fr

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Physical Factors in the Metallurgical Reduction of Zinc Oxide

    By WOOLSEY MCA JOHNSON

    INDEPENDENTLY of the recognized chemical reactions involved in the production of metallic zinc, the process is affected by physical conditions in efficiency, and by commercial as well as technical eco

    Sep 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Colony Describes A Process For Extracting Shale Oil

    Fifty to 75 million years ago, hydrocarbon-bearing rocks were formed in the Green River formation of Colorado, Wyoming and Utah. The hydro- carbons can be extracted from these rocks, marl- stone but m

    Jan 8, 1965

  • AIME
    Mining Methods - Top Slicing in Old Fills at El Bordo Mine, Mexico (Discussion of paper by R. J. Mechin in Transactions 72, 1925)

    R. M. Raymond, New York, N. Y.—The filling and drawing down of the overhead material was done at considerable depth, which is not the usual method in which it starts at the surface.. R. J. Mechin.—

    Jan 1, 1927