Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization
  • AIME
    Finishing Melting Temperatures Of Simple Ingot Steels

    By Henry Hibbard

    This paper aims to put into useful form the information, at hand regarding temperatures of molten steels, covering all carbon contents up to 1.5 per cent., in the hope that if the assumed ideal temper

    Jan 12, 1924

  • AIME
    Notes On The Geology Of East Tintic

    By G. W. Crane

    WHEN ore was discovered on the Tintic Standard property in the spring of 1916, new developments were immediately started both north and south of that property, on the supposition that in East Tintic t

    Jan 9, 1925

  • AIME
    El Teniente

    E1 Teniente made blockcaving look easy. Ore rolling out the Teniente 5 level has the appearance of nicely screened riprap ready for road dressing. Actually it has been mostly size-reduced by nature ab

    Jan 11, 1969

  • AIME
    Volatilization in Assaying

    By Frederic Dewey

    IT IS common to blame irregular assay results upon volatilization and much has been written upon the subject, but there is no. real evidence that, in a properly conducted assay, the loss of either gol

    Jan 2, 1920

  • AIME
    Stripping Methods, Including Advanced Stripping

    By R. T. Moolick, John E. Neill, O&apos

    In selecting a particular stripping method the ultimate aim is the removal of material at the least possible cost. Accomplishment of this goal requires the careful consideration of many factors includ

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Part V – May 1969 - Communications - Activity of Oxygen in Liquid Fe-Au Alloys

    By E. S. Tankins

    The main purpose of this work was to study the effect of gold on the activity coefficient of oxygen in the liquid Fe-Au alloy and to determine how copper and silver change the activity coefficient of

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Toquepala

    From the cold Pacific waters in June rolls a blanket of white clouds that tucks up around the mountains at around 8000 or 9000 ft. This is the way it happens in southern Peru and so the mining operati

    Jan 11, 1969

  • AIME
    Morenci

    IN NOVEMBER 1933 I had the pleasure of receiving an autographed copy of a small brochure entitled "Birth of the Porphyry Coppers." The author, James Colquhoun, a distinguished British mining engineer,

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Atlantic City Paper - The Manganese-Ore Industry of the Caucasus (Postscript, 841)

    By Frank Drake

    Manganese-ores are known to exist in the Caucasus in a number of localities, viz., in the government of Kutais, near the village of Chiaturi; in the same goverilment near the Choruk river, southward f

    Jan 1, 1899

  • AIME
    Non-metallic Minerals - Magnesite Mining in California (with Discussion)

    By Leroy A. Palmer

    All the domestic production of magnesite during 1925 came from two states, California and Washington. Of a total of 120,660 tons of crude ore, 64,600 tons, or 54 per cent., were produced in California

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Reservoir Engineering - General - A Demonstration of the Effect of ‘Dead-End’ Volume on Pressure...

    By B. H. Caudle, M. D. Witte

    In predicting the performance of a pattern injection operation, the engineer needs to know both the amount of oil to be recovered and the rate at which the recovcry will take place. This paper- descri

  • AIME
    Papers - Smelting - Converting Practice - Development of Copper Converting at Butte and Anaconda

    By William Kelly, Frederick Laist

    The slow, tedious and costly method of reducing copper matte to metallic copper in the reverberatory furnace, commonly known as the Welsh process, was displaced by the rapid and inexpensive converter

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    A Comparison Of The Use Of Various Fuels In Copper-Refining Furnaces

    By E. S. Bardwell

    THE reverberatory copper-refining furnaces at the Great Falls Reduction Dept. of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. have used successively, as fuel, lump coal on grates, pulverized coal, oil and natural g

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Mine Gases

    By Jed H. Mosgrave

    One of the most interesting of all the subjects required of persons studying the different facets of coal mining is coal mine gases. Some mine gases have been a real problem since the very beginning o

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    Atlantic City Paper - Notes Upon Preliminary Tests and Cyanide-Treatment of Silver-Ores in Mexico by the MacArthur-Forrest Process

    By John F. Allan

    This paper does not pretend to advance any facts or improvements not known to many members of the Institute, but is intended merely to give a few practical hints on preliminary tests, and to call atte

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, Pa. Paper - The Vallecillo Mines, Mexico.

    By Richard E. Chism

    I have thought it well to lay before the Institute some account of the Vallecillo Mines, now, I believe, the only paying ones in American hands in northeastern Mexico, including the States of Nuevo Le

    Jan 1, 1885

  • AIME
    Twinning in Copper and Brass (f90961be-766d-4caa-802a-943d904a2ff1)

    By Albert Phillips

    As EARLY As 1824, Haidinger1 described crystals of native copper that were, according to Dana,2 "probably twinned parallel to the octahedral plane and normal to this axis." In 1837, Rose3 very clearly

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Testing the Drawing Properties of Rolled Zinc Alloys

    By E. H. Kelton

    THE purposes of this paper are to describe the use of adjustable cut and draw tools as a control test of drawing properties and to point out that no other well-known test or combination of tests deter

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    Twinning In Copper And Brass

    By Albert J. Phillips

    As EARLY AS 1824, Haidinger1 described crystals of native copper that were, according to Dana,2 "probably twinned parallel to the octahedral plane and normal to this axis." In 1837, Rose3 very clearly

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    The Precipitation-Hardening Of Copper Steels

    By Cyril Smith

    A COMPLETE discussion of the literature on the subject of the influence of copper on iron and steel will be published elsewhere.1 The present paper is concerned especially with the precipitation-harde

    Jan 1, 1933