Search Documents

Sort by

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Life of Crucible Steel Furnaces

    By John Howe Hall

    The recently announced run of three years, nine months and eleven days made by a crucible steel melting furnace of the Columbia Tool Steel Co., which is claimed as a world's record, brings forcib

    Jan 1, 1914

  • SME
    Use Of Lightweight Flyash Blocks To Construct Fills On Sensitive Soils

    By E. B. Kroeger

    One of the problems encountered when constructing a roadway is the planned route often needs to cross soils that are soft and highly compressible. An approach to dealing with soft and compressible so

    Jan 1, 2003

  • AIME
    Iron and Steel - The Importance of Manganese in the Steel Industry (with Discussion)

    By H. M. Boylston

    Metallic manganese was first produced in 1773, by Sven Rinmann, a Swedish mineralogist. In 1799, William Reynolds, of Ketley, England, obtained a patent on the use of manganese dioxide in the manufact

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Does Forging Increase Specific Density Of Steel?

    By H. E. Doerr

    THE writer has been unable to find much information relative to tests made to determine the effect of forging on the specific density of steel. The opinion, however, among men engaged in the business,

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AIME
    An Oil-Land Law

    By George Smith

    Introduction THAT an oil-land law is the most needed item in the proposed program of mineral-land legislation follows from the fact that Congress has never enacted a law really applicable to petroleu

    Jan 6, 1914

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Kentucky during 1938

    By C. D. Hunter, I. B. Browning, Ralph Thomas

    Production of oil in Kentucky during 1938 was 5,566,154 bbl., showing a substantial increase over that of the year 1937; while in the gas areas development was somewhat retarded although deliveries we

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Papers - Magnetic Aging of Iron Due to Oxygen

    By N. A. Zeigler, T. D. Yensen

    Aging is a term that connotes a slow change in properties under ordinary operating conditions. It can be accelerated by increasing the temperature and by mechanical straining. The magnetic properties

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Papers - Electrocapillary Amalgamation (T.P. 676, with discussion)

    By Orson Cutler Shepard

    The term "electrocapillary amalgamation" is used in this paper to designate amalgamation processes that depend upon electrocapillary phenomenon; i.e., the action of an electric current upon the surfac

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Kentucky during 1938

    By C. D. Hunter, I. B. Browning, Ralph Thomas

    Production of oil in Kentucky during 1938 was 5,566,154 bbl., showing a substantial increase over that of the year 1937; while in the gas areas development was somewhat retarded although deliveries we

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Papers - Electrocapillary Amalgamation (T.P. 676, with discussion)

    By Orson Cutler Shepard

    The term "electrocapillary amalgamation" is used in this paper to designate amalgamation processes that depend upon electrocapillary phenomenon; i.e., the action of an electric current upon the surfac

    Jan 1, 1939

  • CIM
    The Start-up and Operation of the Gibraltar Mines SX-EW Plant (e864bb9e-42ee-4b0f-8109-3374578f0d92)

    By J. C. O'Rourke

    "Gibraltar Mines Ltd. has been operating its open pit copper mine for fifteen years. In that time over 140 million tons of waste and low grade material has been placed on the mine waste dumps. Laborat

    Jan 1, 1988

  • AIME
    The Coal-Pulverizing Plant At The McGill Smelter Of The Kennecott Copper Corporation

    By Edward Pesout

    THE McGill smelter started operations in the year 1907. The smelter furnaces were fired with run-of-mine coal on grates until April 1911, when oil firing was introduced. Oil firing continued until Apr

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Philadelphia, October 1876 Paper - The Determination of Carbon by Magnetic Tests

    By Charles M. Ryder

    In presenting this paper to the Institute I beg to mention, first, the results which I have obtained and the apparatus which I have employed, and to follow this with a brief description of the steps b

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - Lead Activation in Sulfonate Flotation of Quartz

    By S. Atak, M. C. Fuerstenau

    Clean quartz cannot be floated with a high molecular weight sulfonate as collector at any pH. Good flotation is achieved from pH 6 to 12 when Pb is added at low additions of sulfonate. The active spec

    Jan 1, 1965

  • TMS
    Characterization and Incorporation of Paper Sludge Waste into Clay Bricks

    By Djalma Souza, Rubén Sánchez, Regina Maria Pinheiro, Carlos Maurício Fontes Vieira, Sergio Neves Monteiro

    "This work has for objectives to characterize a waste generated in the form of sludge during the treatment of the effluent of a paper making industry and to evaluate the effect of its incorporation up

    Jan 1, 2008

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Matte Granulation at Herculaneum, Mo.

    By Henry B. Smith, S. Paul Lindau

    ThREe years ago it was decided by the management to granulate the matte that is produced in the smelter of the St. Joseph Lead Co. at Hereulaneum, Mo., thereby doing away with a large amount of labor

    Jan 1, 1917

  • AIME
    Geology of the Getchell Mine

    By Roy Hardy

    THE Getchell mine is a comparatively recent discovery in the old Potosi mining district, Humboldt County, Nevada, a district organized in the seventies and eighties, in which some prospecting was done

    Jan 1, 1940

  • AIME
    The Seasoning Of Castings

    By Richard Moldenke

    ONE of the little-known characteristics of cast' iron, which neverthe-less has an important bearing on results where accuracy in machining-is essential, is the ability of this material to ease up

    Jan 2, 1917

  • NIOSH
    Appendix A

    By George Bockosh

    Mr. Bockosh is an electrical engineer with the U.S. Bureau of Mines In Pittsburgh, and has devoted the last two years to research on underground illumination. He formerly was a mine maintenance forema

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AIME
    Papers - Magnetic Aging of Iron Due to Oxygen

    By N. A. Zeigler, T. D. Yensen

    Aging is a term that connotes a slow change in properties under ordinary operating conditions. It can be accelerated by increasing the temperature and by mechanical straining. The magnetic properties

    Jan 1, 1935