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  • SME
    Mechanized Rock Excavation In Mining

    By George H. K. Schenck

    In this decade of the 1.970's it is forecast that eight billion cubic yards of rock will be excavated from 400, 000 miles of new tunnels, drifts and other underground workings in the western worl

    Jan 1, 1974

  • AIME
    Cracks in Aluminum-alloy Castings

    By Robert Anderson

    ROUGHLY, a crack in a casting may be considered, for the moment, to be due to fracture of the alloy resulting from the stress set up by the contraction in volume on passing from the liquid to the soli

    Jan 10, 1921

  • AIME
    Recent Developments In Coal Briquetting

    By Charles Malcolmson

    IN the United States, improvements in methods of combustion have made possible the use of the smaller sizes of anthracite. This coal is now being reclaimed from the culm banks accumulated by the miner

    Jan 2, 1915

  • SME
    Advances In Dry Gravity Separation

    By S. Polegeg

    The basic principle of this separation method was already defined in the middle of the nineteenth century. However, a change over for the treatment of minerals has followed from the construction of pr

    Jan 1, 1992

  • AIME
    Low-Sulfur Coal In Pennsylvania

    By T. M. Chance

    THE term "low-sulfur coal," as used in this discussion, is limited to coals containing less, or very little more, than 1 per cent. sulfur. For certain purposes it might be advantageous to include coal

    Jan 8, 1919

  • AIME
    Metal-Losses In Copper-Slags.

    By J. PARKCEH CHANNING

    Discussion of the paper of Lewis T. Wright, presented at the New Haven meeting, February, 1909 (Trans., xl., 492 to 495). J. PARKE CHANNING, New York, N. Y. (communication to the Secretary*):-Mr. Wr

    Feb 1, 1911

  • AIME
    Use Of Cripples In Industry

    By James Munroe

    APPALLING as has been the loss of life in the last 51 months, there is one slight compensation : no longer will there be in the world a cripple, in the old meaning of the term. Men handicapped by woun

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    Control of Dust in Mines

    By R. J. Mechin

    IN the early part of 1934, the St. Joseph Lead Co. purchased from the Kadco Corporation three dust-removal units, two suitable for raise work, and the other for drifting operations. The equipment was

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Coal - Progress in Longwall Mining

    By M. Schmellenkamp

    By comparing two longwall operations, one begun in 1956 and the other in 1960, the author is able to demonstrate the increases in production and performance made possible by longwall mining. These a

    Jan 1, 1963

  • AIME
    Iron Ore Reserves in Michigan

    By Franklin G. Pardee

    WARTIME depletion of the reserves of iron ore in the Lake Superior region of the grade and character now being shipped down the Lakes was serious. The time has come to take stock of the resources that

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Carbides In Low-Chromium Steel

    By Walter Crafts, C. M. Offenhauer

    IN the course of study of the heat-treatment of low-alloy steels, the behavior of alloy carbides at subcritical temperatures was found to vary from that indicated by published investigations. In order

    Jan 1, 1942

  • TMS
    The Soluble Gold in Arsenopyrite

    By R. M. Lamya

    A considerable part of gold encapsulated in some refractory sulphides can be dissolved during sulphide matrix decomposition in non-complexing aqueous media. This has been concluded from laboratory res

    Jan 1, 1995

  • AIME
    Capillary Behavior in Porous Solids

    By M. C. Leverett

    KNOWLEDGE of the theory underlying the behavior of mixtures of fluids in reservoir rocks is essential to the proper solution of certain types of problems in petroleum pro-duction, but is as yet incomp

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    Blast-Furnace Investigation in England

    By AIME AIME

    COMMITTEE No. 2 of the Iron and Steel Institute b f Great. Britain has presented its first report, of 27 printed pages, on blast-furnace plant and practice. This report outlines the various features o

    Jan 1, 1929

  • SME
    Innovation in the Copper Industry

    By G. A. Eltringham

    Mining and extraction methods in the copper industry use basic technologies developed over a period of almost 150 years. Paradigm shifts in the industry have been rare, yet human involvement in the ac

    Jan 1, 1998

  • AUSIMM
    Basic Oxygen Steelmaking in Australia

    Basic Oxygen Steelmaking (B.O.S.) commenced in Australia in December, 1962. Two 200-ton furnaces were installed initially at Newcastle with a 50-ton furnace coupled to a continuous casting machine

    Jan 1, 1972

  • AIME
    Indiana Petroleum Conditions In 1924

    By W. N. Logan

    THE petroleum industry in Indiana made no extraordinary progress during the year 1924. The surplus stock of crude, brought about by the production of 732,407,000 bbl. in the United States in 1923, as

    Jan 3, 1925

  • CIM
    Progress in Iron Ore Beneficiation

    By Holt. Grover J.

    "IntroductionThe history of iron ore production in the United States has followed a pattern not far different from that set in the production of non-ferrous ores; the first interest of the prospector

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    Copper in a Changing World

    By Charles M. Brinckerhoff

    When I first went to Arizona in 1925, mining was primarily an underground job. Ajo, Sacramento Hill in Bisbee and Jerome were the only open pit operations in the state. Thousands of men, however, were

    Jan 3, 1972

  • SME
    Prognosis And Control In Tunneling

    By Heinz Hofmann

    In order to drive tunnels with low overburden in town regions, it is necessary to give a quantitative prognosis for the deformation of the underground as well as of the tunnel-lining and of its stabi

    Jan 1, 1974