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  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Production in Oklahoma during 1930

    By Henry A. Ley

    Oklahoma produced about 40,000,000 bbl. less crude oil in 1930 than it did in 1929, but developed the largest initial production from current well completions ever recorded in its history. The output

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Connate Water in Oil and Gas Sands

    By Ralph Schilthuis

    SEVERAL investigators1-8 have reported evidence of the existence of native or connate water in oil-and-gas-bearing strata. Both water and salt have been detected in cores of oil sands that yielded oil

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Petroleum - Technologic Progress in the Oil Industry

    By F. Julius Fohs

    As an industry approaches stabilization, greater and greater stress must be laid on its technologic progress, which becomes a prime aid in improving its condition. The oil industry is tending toward t

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - Sulfur Equilibria Between Gases and Slags Containing FeO

    By George R. St. Pierre, John Chipman

    METALLURGISTS have been studying the chem-ical behavior of sulfur in steelmaking for many years in order to have a better control of the sulfur content of finished steel. During the refining period in

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Annual Review – Mineral Industry Health & Safety

    By S. H. Ash

    Safety records in the mineral industry for 1954 will do well to hold their own as compared with 1953, because of the poorer rate in the coalmining branches, even without the recent mine explosion at t

    Jan 3, 1955

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Nucleation and Growth of Nickel from Nickel Carbonyl

    By N. Albon, J. F. Miller, R. W. Coutant

    The deposition of nickel from nickel carbonyl onto amorphous substrates has been studied, with attention being paid to the specific effects of the physical and chemical nature of the substrate and to

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Production Of Iron

    No phase of the steel industry is more typical of its remark- able progress than is the evolution and development of the modern American blast furnace. The founding of the Institute in 1871 also marke

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    A Five-Year Plan for Engineering Education ? New Curricula Provide Full Development of the Engineer

    By T. L. Joseph

    A DEMAND for specialized knowledge has directed engineering curricula towards competency in some particular field or occupation. Preparation for life in a broad sense of completeness has received litt

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    The Method Of Assaying A Quantity Of Silver That Contains Gold.

    HAVING taught you to make aqua fortis and to cleanse and reduce it to perfection, before I teach you the work of parting on a large scale, I wish now to teach you how to make an assay of the amount of

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    A Technique For Photographing Difficult Subjects Through A Petrographic Microscope

    By Donald W. Scott

    GENERALLY speaking, there is nothing very difficult about taking good micrographs of photogenic thin sections or grains with a petrographic micro-scopecamera setup. However, sometimes it is desired to

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Softening of Strain-Hardened Polycrystalline Copper During Reversed Stress Fatigue and Tensile Fatigue

    By E. Hein, R. A. Dodd

    The fatigue softening of prior strain-hardened poly crystalline copper has been determined by measuring changes inflow stress resulting from fatigue treatments. Tensile fatigue does not soften the met

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Civil Engineers' Attitude Toward Licensing Engineers

    By John Goodell

    CIVIL engineers seem to number in their ranks more advocates of licensing than are found among the practitioners of other branches of the pro-fession. Licensing was not originated by civil engineers b

    Jan 4, 1922

  • AIME
    The Duplex Process of Steel Manufacture at the Maryland Steel Works

    By F. F. Lines

    IT is not the intention of the writer to enter into a discussion of the relative merits of the duplex process as compared with the straight scrap and pig iron process, working under the same condition

    Jan 4, 1915

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Manganese Recovery as Chloride from Ores and Slags

    By W. L. Falke, A. A. Cochran

    A basic problem in connection with manganese is to find economical ways to utilize domestic resources. As a part of its program to conserve domestic mineral resources and to reduce dependence of forei

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel Division - The Nonmetallic Constituents of Steel

    By Clarence E. Sims

    An effort has been made to give both a comprehensive and simplified picture of the origin, modes of formation, and characteristics of nonmetallic inclusions in steel. Exogenous inclusions, those for

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
    Determination of Carbon in Iron and Steel

    By Andrew S. M’Creath

    THE treatment which a steel receives, and the uses to which it may be applied, are frequently determined by the percentage of carbon which it contains; and especially is this the case in the different

    Jan 1, 1877

  • AIME
    Papers - Ventilation, Drainage, and Haulage - Modern Haulage to Meet Local Conditions (T.P. 2207, Coal Tech., May 1947)

    By G. S. Jenkins

    The statistics set forth by Professor Mitchell in a proceding paper very carefully brought out the points that indicate that a marked amount of consideration must be given to" the haulage problem to a

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    Froth Characteristics In Phosphate Flotation

    By V. M. Lovell

    The recovery of apatite from the phoscorite ores occurring in the Transvaal, Republic of South Africa, involves a flotation process that is particularly difficult to characterize from a fundamental po

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Birmingham Paper - Notes on the Clinton Group in Alabama

    By Truman H. Aldrich

    The red, or fossiliferous, ore is found in the Clinton group of the Silurian formation. This group is from 100 to 500 ft. thick in Alabama, and its outcrops have been mapped by the State or the U. S.

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Technical Notes - A New Technique for Examination of Oilfield Brines

    By George W. Crawford, W. P. Aycock, E. W. Hough

    Forty oilfield brines have been examined so far by a polarographic technique new in petroleum engineering called the "tensatnmetric method" by the team of biochemists who perfected its use in their fi

    Jan 1, 1958