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  • AIME
    Deposits of Heavy Minerals on the Brazilian Coast

    By Joseph L. Gillson

    BRAZIL has had an industry based on ocean beach deposits of heavy minerals containing monazite, zircon, rutile, and ilmenite for well over 40 years, but except at the very earliest period, prior to 19

    Jan 6, 1950

  • AIME
    Wilkes-Barre Paper - Mine-Rescue Service of the State of Illinois

    By H. H. Stoek

    The origin of the Mine-Rescue Service of the State of Illinois can be traced to two distinct sources, the work of the Rescue Station at Urbana and the Cherry disaster. During the early part of the

    Jan 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Selective Combustion In Coal

    By F. S. Sinnatt

    THIS paper is the outcome of an extended investigation carried out in association with Dr. L. Slater. The inquiry had been continued in various directions and a number of results are quoted from an in

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    Expression and Interpretation of the Size Composition of Coal

    By M. R. Geer

    THE importance of the size composition of coal is reflected in the differ-ence in price of the various sizes of the same coal and in the large number of primary sizes and mixtures of sizes produced by

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Bottom-hole Measurements in Pumping Wells

    By J. J. Jakosky

    THE fundamental hydrodynamic principles governing the production of oil from wells have been carefully studied and evaluated by many investigators. These prior studies are quite complete and cover vir

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Mining - Rail-Belt Haulage System

    By C. E. Johnston

    In December 1956, International Minerals & Chemical Corp. installed a rope-suspended belt haulage system in its Carlsbad, N. M., potash mine to complement the already existing rail transport arrangeme

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Papers - Suggestions for the Control of Silicosis in Mining (T.P. 930)

    By Donald E. Cummings

    Measures appropriate for the control of the silicosis hazard in mining cannot be formulated precisely, but sufficient knowledge1-l9 has accumulated during the past quarter century to permit the sugges

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Specific Efficiency of the Blast Furnace

    By Richard Franchot

    IN the inevitable conquest of the blast furnace by metallurgical science in the solution of the problem of how to make more and better iron or to burn less coke, or both, it is highly desirable first

    Jan 9, 1926

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Crystal Structure of Solid Solutions (with Discussion)

    By Edgar C. Bain

    Of the important phenomenon of the hardening of steel, Professor Sauveurl says: It would seem as if the methods used to date for the elucidation of this complex problem have yielded all they are ca

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: Phase Relations in the Titanium-Aluminum System

    By Elmars Ence, Harold Margolin

    A. J. Goldak and J. Gordon Parr (University of Alberta) —While we appreciate the difficulties involved in any investigation of this system, and we wish to congratulate the authors on their comprehensi

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Mine Ventilation - Permissible Limits of Toxic and Noxious Gases in Mine and Tunnel Ventilation (with Discussion)

    By R. R. Sayers

    Ventilation may be defined as the process by which vitiated air of an enclosed or partly enclosed space is continuously replaced by fresh air. Fresh air has been defined as invigorating pure air. Pure

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Open-Hearth Refractories (381ffab6-f417-4ef7-bb53-bdfc34aa4686)

    OPEN-HEARTH refractories are not merely an accessory to the furnace. They are the furnace, to all intents and purposes. The steel work of the main structure is merely an open frame which helps to supp

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Bone-Ash Cupels

    By Frederic Dewey

    BONE-ASH cupels have been used from time immemorial to absorb litharge, and accompanying oxides; in assaying. Doubtless, also, from the earliest days cupels have been most unjustly blamed for much poo

    Jan 11, 1917

  • AIME
    Static And Dynamic Elastic Moduli Of Rocks Under Pressure

    By M. S. King

    In the design of foundations for large structures and of safe mine openings in rock, the results of laboratory and small-scale in-situ tests are often used to predict the behavior of the material as a

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Detroit Paper - Condition of Thorium in Thoriated Tungsten Filament (with Discussion)

    By Ancel St. John

    At the New York meeting of the Institute of Metals Division in February, 1927, Jeffries and Tarasov presented a paper on Tungsten and Thoria,' in which the experimental facts were interpreted in

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Important Results Obtained in the Past Fifteen Years with the Stiff and Heavy Rail-Sections (Discussion, 1015)

    By P. H. Dudley

    When we see the magnificent passenger-trains of from 8 to 12 coaches, drawn by locomotives weighing from 100 to 110 tons, at speeds of from 50 to 60 miles per hour between terminals, to make a schedul

    Jan 1, 1900

  • AIME
    Cheap Oxygen In Metallurgy

    By Edmund Kirby

    THE results to come from the application of cheap oxygen to industry in general will be so great that it is not possible to enumerate them beforehand and still less to estimate them. We naturally thin

    Jan 11, 1924

  • AIME
    Papers - Zinc - New Jersey Zinc Company Process for the Refining of Zinc by Redistillation

    By W. M. Peirce, R. K. Waring

    Zinc of high purity offers definite advantages in certain fields. A process by which zinc of 99.99 + per cent purity is produced by pyro-metallurgical methods is described in this paper. The process c

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Conditioning Surfaces For Froth Flotation

    By Oliver C. Ralston, James E. Norman

    SEPARATION of minerals by froth flotation is rightly called an art. It can truthfully be said that no two ores separate in the same way. The difference in results obtained when natural and synthetic m

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Shot Firing by Electricity (with Discussion)

    By N. S. Greensfelder

    The firing of explosive charges by electricity dates back to 1745 when a Doctor Watson is said to have used an electric spark for igniting gunpowder. His method failed in practical application because

    Jan 1, 1923