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  • AIME
    Some Causes and Cures of Unemployment

    By Herbert Hoover

    YOUR committee asks that I speak today on the relations of the engineering profession to public affairs. That takes in a lot of ground. This being a cheerful occasion, I will assume that I should excl

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Poland and Its Mineral Wealth

    By AIME AIME

    MINERALS and mineral resources are recognized as one of the things that nations are prone to quarrel about. The territory that was arbitrarily incorporated into the Polish Republic after the World War

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Annual Meeting One of the Best Even if Not the Biggest

    By AIME AIME

    IF the observation of our British friends is true that Americans put new records in bigness above everything else then the 150th meeting of the Institute was not the grand success it seemed to be. Jus

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals ? New Products, New Processes, New Uses for the Nonmetallics

    By Oliver Bowles

    PRICES of quartz sold in the United States in 1938 ranged from $1.15 to $36,000 a ton. This startling variation was due simply to the differences between glass sand and rock - crystal, materials that

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Advantages of Coal Carbonization as Exemplified in the Curran-Knowles Process

    By M. D. Curran

    AS applied to coal, the term processing is subject to many interpretations. To some it means preparation of coal for the market by mechanical means such as crushing, sizing, washing, or treating with

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    How Detachable Bits Have Cut Mining Costs

    By W. M. Ross

    AMONG the comparatively few A radical changes in mining equipment in recent years is the introduction and use to an ever greater degree of detachable bits for rock drills. Just how great the possible

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    What's Right with Coal?

    By J. E. Tobey

    THERE are a lot of good things about this great industry of ours. Let us stop commiserating and consider some of the things that are right in this business. Coal is number one in the basic material i

    Jan 1, 1939

  • NIOSH
    Coal Mining In Europe - A Study Of Practices In Different Coal Formations And Under Various Economic And Regulatory Conditions Compared With Those In The United States ? Introduction

    By George S. Rice

    The major purpose of this bulletin, as indicated in the preface by Dr. John W. Finch, Director of the Bureau of Mines, is to give a critical review of the coal-mining methods used in the principal pro

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AUSIMM
    Experience with Boiler Furnace Walls at Mount Isa Mines Limited's Power Plant

    By Crawford M

    During the initial development of Mount Isa Mines power was supplied from a temporary power plant situated near the Man & Supply Shaft. The main power plant was placed in service early in 1931 and

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Some Things We Don't Know about the Creep of Metals

    By H. W. Gillett

    UNLIKE most previous Howe lecturers, I had not the good fortune to be associated with Henry Marion Howe, nor to be directly one of his students. Yet, through his writings, he has been my teacher, as h

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Mineral Wool - the Mining Industry's Fastest Growing Product

    By J. R. Thoenen

    IN five years mineral wool has grown to a thirty-million-dollar industry from one whose output was valued, in 1933, at $1,700,000. Ten years ago, in 1928, there were only seven producing companies, wi

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Current Problems in Oil Conservation - An Executive's View of the Conservation of an Irreplaceable National Resource

    By Harry C. Wiess

    PETROLEUM has come to be one of the most important and essential of the mineral re- sources of the nation. It is the most advantageous source of mineral fuels and of lubricants, and as such it has pro

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Germany's Drive for Mineral Self-Sufficiency

    By AIME AIME

    AMONG the European nations Germany is the center of interest economically as well as politically, and of prime importance for Europe as a whole is Germany's capacity to produce mineral products f

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Papers - Some Things We Don't Know about the Creep of Metals (T. P. 1087)

    By H. W. Gillett

    Unlike most previous Howe lecturers, I had not the good fortune to be associated with Henry Marion Howe, nor to be directly one of his students. Yet, through his writings, he has been my teacher, as h

    Jan 1, 1939

  • NIOSH
    RI 3417 Survey of Crude Oil in Storage, 1936-1937

    "INTRODUCTION Early in 1936 the Interstate Oil Compact Commission and other groups interested in forecasts of demand for petroleum requested the Bureau of Mines to make a physical inventory of crude-o

    Sep 1, 1938

  • NIOSH
    RI 3400 Progress Reports - Metallurgical Division - 24. Mineral Physics Studies

    By R. S. Dean

    "It has long been recognized that the properties of polycrystalline substances are not the same as those of single crystals. These differences are especially marked in metels and metallic minerals, an

    May 1, 1938

  • NIOSH
    RI 3392 Resume Of Problems Relating To Edgewater Encroachment In Oil Sands

    By F. G. Miller, H. C. Miller

    Petroleum technologists and progressive operators constantly are striving to increase the percentage of oil that may to recovered from reservoir rocks through wells. The exhaustive studies that have b

    Mar 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Papers - Studies upon the Corrosion of Tin, I-Potential Measurements on High-purity Tin in Carbonate Solutions (With Discussion)

    By Gerhard Derge

    A series of studies of the corrosion of tin is under way in the Metals Research Laboratory at the Carnegie Institute of Technology. The complete program includes examination of the corrosion properti

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Papers - Tantalum Carbide Tool Compositions (With Discussion)

    By Philip M. Mc Kenna

    When a new material becomes available to industry, it is useful to describe its properties as a guide to its most effective application; and when the new material may be produced in compositions havin

    Jan 1, 1938

  • AIME
    Papers - Underground Mining - Effects of Immediate Roof Thickness in Longwall Mining as Determined by

    By Phillip B. Bucky, R. S. Taborelli

    The term "longwall mining" is best known to coal men, although modifications of the method are continually being used in other fields. Longwall mining is of interest today because it makes for greater

    Jan 1, 1938