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  • AIME
    Safety, Ventilation and Industrial Hygiene - Most Modern Methods Adopted to Attain Safe Working Conditions

    By E. J. Eisenach, W. E. Jones

    SAFETY and industrial hygiene have always been recognized as highly important in company policy, and the co-operative support of the company officials and entire plant personnel has contributed largel

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Utilization of Natural Gas in the United States - Proven Reserves Would Last 35 Years at 1944 Rate of Consumption

    By G. G. Oberfell

    THOUGH the largest volume use of natural gas has been, is. and in all probability will continue to be as a fuel for domestic and industrial heating, it has various market outlets, both as a fuel and a

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Wasting a Valuable Natural Resource - Mine Recovery of Bituminous Coal Could Be Increased Greatly If the Currently Uneconomic Tonnage Were Subsidized

    By Howard N. Eavenson

    WASTE of coal, or perhaps more properly the percentage of its recovery in mining, has keenly interested me during an experience of over a half century in coal mining. In the early part of that time an

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Finland Looks Ahead in Mining ? Further Developments of Small Group of Operating Mines Needed to Support Country?s Heavy Industry

    By H. Stigzelius

    FINLAND'S recent mining history is both dramatic and pitiful in its shifting fortunes, dominated as it has been, by the country's proximity to the border zone of opposing dictatorships and s

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Clouds Over Mining - Labor Difficulties, Unjust Taxation, Lowered Tariffs, Diminishing Reserves, Challenge the Best Thought of the Industry

    By L. S. Cates

    THE war is now behind us. We in the mining industry feel a just pride in the part that our industry and our men and our products played in defeating the enemy on the fighting fronts around the world.

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Mechanization in Coal Mining Makes Rapid Progress - Conservation of Coal Among the Desirable Results

    By Albert L. Toenges

    COAL mining technique progressed slowly until the advent of mechanized mining. The cutting machine was a forward step, but had only a limited effect upon improving the percentage of coal recovery. Pre

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Factors Affecting Investments in South American Mining - The Guianas, Paraguay, and Uruguay

    By NEWTON B. KNOX

    THE Guianas region is a geological unit, consisting of the northern lobe of the Brazilian Shield, but political accident and the fact that rivers act as the principal means of transportation have div

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Minerals and Mining in South Africa - A Variety of Mineral Products Supports the Economy of the Union

    By Sidney H. Haughton

    FOLLOWING the discovery of diamonds in 1870 and the Witwatersrand gold fields in 1886 South Africa changed from a predominantly pastoral country with a scattered white population into a land whose eco

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Fine Grinding and Concentration at Climax - Molybdenite Easily Floated, But Maximum Recovery And Iron and Copper Elimination Sought

    By E. J. Duggan

    CLIMAX ore is an altered and highly silicified granite, about half of the gangue being quartz. Molybdenite is the only mineral recovered and most of it is intimately associated with the quartz in fine

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Los Alamos - The Town of Beginning Again - A behind-the-scenes story of life in the community built around the hidden laboratory where the A-bomb was made, and where nuclear research now goes forward

    By Marie Kinzel

    LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, the birthplace f the atomic bomb, is one of the most famous-and mysterious-places in the world. It leaped into fame on Aug. 6, 1945, when the first atomic bomb burst over Hiros

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Augustus Braun Kinzel - Director, A.I.M.E.

    By AIME

    DURING the happy and peaceful years between the Treaty of Versailles and the third New Deal, metallurgy became one of the most cosmopolitan of the sciences. Any metallurgist can name some twenty or th

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    The Mass Spectrometer as an Analytical Tool - What It Is, How It Works, and What It Can Do

    By A. Keith Brewer

    RECENT advances in the fields of chemistry, biology, and metallurgy have confronted the analytical chemist with an entirely new set of problems. Development of plastics and synthetics has brought abou

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Metals in Modern Society - Fundamental Research on Metals and Alloys a Must

    By Cyril Stanley Smith

    ARCHEOLOGISTS, by use of the terms Bronze Age and Iron Age, indicate that metals have in the past determined the character of civilization. The relatively simple discovery by a primitive metallurgist

    Jan 1, 1946

  • NIOSH
    IC 7352 Annual Report Of Research And Technologic Work On Coal - Fiscal Year 1945 ? Introduction

    By A. C. Fieldner

    This is the tenth annual report of research and technologic work conducted by the Bureau of Mines on the occurrence, properties, mining, preparation, and uses of coal and coal products. These annual r

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Oil And Gas Developments in Kentucky in 1945

    By Louise B. Freeman

    Kentucky for the first time in its oil history passed the 10 million barrel mark. Of the total 10,019,641 bbl., 8,262,516 bbl. were produced in Western Kentucky, and Union County surpassed all others,

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    A National Spokesman for Engineers

    By A. B. Stickney

    UPWARDS of 200,000 engineers in this country are sufficiently interested in engineering as a profession to have joined a society, but not over 10% of them belong to any one society. There is a widely-

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    The Stock-Piling Bill-S.752 - Procurement of Strategic Minerals Should Have Beneficial Effect on the Mineral Industry, Both Here end Abroad

    By Harry J. Evans

    DURING the fury of the conflict it was believed quite generally that World War II was being fought for and would accomplish a permanent peace. Yet, before the guns were actually stilled on all fronts,

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Mining Geology - Much More Ore in the United States Awaits Discovery Through All-Out Efforts of Geologists

    By H. E. McKinstry

    LIKE nearly everything else, mining geology has been reconverting. Many geologists had been in military and other government service. Many more, with mining companies, had been working primarily towar

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Geology of the Climax Ore Body - Closely Spaced Fractures Make Block Caving of the Rock Possible

    By John W. Vanderwilt

    THE Climax district is in northeastern Lake County, Colorado, on Fremont Pass (elevation 11,320 ft.) where the continental divide runs east-west joining high peaks of the Mosquito Range with the Sawat

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Personnel Department ? A Modern Camp With Excellent Living Conditions Despite High Altitude

    By A. W. Doepke

    CLIMAX is situated in the heart of the high Rockies at Fremont Pass on the Continental Divide. This setting naturally throws some of the romantic aura of the old mining camps around the town. In its e

    Jan 1, 1946