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  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Maufacture of Coke

    By F. E. Lucas

    This paper is offered with considerable diflidence, since some of the statements made may not agree with the opinions of other members of the Institute. What I give is the result of some years of expe

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    St. Louis Paper - October, 1917 - Enrichment and Segregation of Mill Tailings for Future Treatment

    By F. E. Marcy

    It is not my purpose to write a lengthy article or to attempt the solution of the problem I am presenting, but to call attention to what I believe an important issue, hoping that it may arouse in some

    Jan 1, 1918

  • AIME
    On An Apparatus for Testing The Resistance of Metals to Repeated Shocks

    By William Bent

    MORE than twelve years were spent by Wöhler at the instance of the Prussian Government in experimenting upon the resistance of iron and steel to repeated stresses. The results of his experiments are e

    Jan 1, 1880

  • AIME
    Washington Paper - The United States Prototype Standards of Weight and Measure

    By T. C. Mendenhall

    All persons, actively engaged in your profession, must have a natural interest in the subject of weights and measures. All members of the engineering profession have to do with operations of weighing

    Jan 1, 1890

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Technical Education

    By Lewis M. Haupt

    IT has given me great pleasure to read, in the papers recently pub lished by this Society, the discussions on the subject of Technical Education, which were developed at the joint meeting held at the

  • SME
    Whodunit: Using Expert Witnesses in Environmental Litigation

    By Laura J. Carroll, Gordon A. Goldsmith

    Experts, like many of the speakers at the SME Annual Conference, are frequently called upon by lawyers to assist them in litigation. Due to the technical nature of many cases, the testimony of an expe

    Jan 1, 1998

  • AIME
    Papers - Influence of Silver on the Softening of Cold-worked Copper (With Discussion)

    By H. C. Kenny

    The annealing or softening temperature of cold-worked copper is appreciably increased by almost unbelievably small amounts of silver. As indicated by some data in this paper, the softening temperature

    Jan 1, 1934

  • AIME
    History of Coal Mining

    By Samuel M. Cassidy

    The exact date of man's first use of coal is lost in antiquity. The discovery that certain black rock would burn was undoubtedly accidental and probably occurred independently and many times in t

    Jan 1, 1973

  • SME
    Environmental Governance - The Homestake Way

    By Jack E. Thompson

    I have spent my entire life in the mining industry pursuing what I believed was an honorable profession that provided products that were critical for our social and economic well being. Now I am told

    Jan 1, 1997

  • AIME
    Arizona Paper - Mine Accounting for Small Mines

    By James E. Chapman

    The observations here presented are not those of an expert accountant, but of one who, while he has seen considerable service in the accounting departments of large companies, has spent more time in e

    Jan 1, 1917

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Ae 1, the Equilibrium Temperature for A 1 in Carbon Steel

    By Henry M. Howe

    COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY The Equilibrium Position of A 1.—Some of the most important data on this subject are collected in Table I. Definition of Ae 1.—-Just as we call A 1 of rising temperature Ac 1

    Jan 1, 1914

  • AIME
    Some Notes on Blue Brittleness

    By Leland Van Wert

    IN 1888, Howard,1 working at the Watertown Arsenal on the tensile properties of ferrous materials at various temperatures, noted the curious fact that the stress-strain diagrams of low-carbon steels t

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AUSIMM
    Wetherstones Gold Deposit - A New Perspective

    Wetherstones gold deposit is located just east of the township of Lawrence, in the Otago District of the South Island, New Zealand. The paper will describe aspects of the mining and exploration histor

    Jan 1, 2004

  • AIME
    The Scoria Process For The Manufacture Of Fine-Ore Briquettes, Flue-Dust Briquettes, And Slag Brick For Building Purposes. (9ae28fd2-2a5a-4f84-b6c5-493574b48522)

    By Ernest Stütz

    (New York Meeting, October, 1913.) THE problem of increasing blast-furnace efficiency through diminution of flue-dust production while operating with burdens consisting largely of fine ores has of re

    Jan 7, 1913

  • AIME
    History of Coal

    By Samuel M. Cassidy

    The exact date of man's first use of coal is lost in antiquity. The discovery that certain black rock would burn was undoubtedly accidental and probably occurred independently and many times in t

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    The Scoria Process For The Manufacture Of Fine-Ore Briquettes, Flue-Dust Briquettes, And Slag Brick For Building Purposes.

    By Ernest Stütz

    (New York Meeting, October, 1918.) THE problem of increasing blast: furnace efficiency through diminution of flue-dust production while operating with burdens consisting largely of fine ores has of r

    Jan 7, 1913

  • AIME
    History Of Coal Mining (64c04c98-13fa-429c-b503-f3c3732f7cd9)

    By Samuel M. Cassidy

    The exact date of man's first use of coal is lost in antiquity. The discovery that certain black rock would burn was undoubtedly accidental and probably occurred independently and many times in t

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Scoria Process for the Manufacture of Fine-Ore Briquettes, Flue-Dust Briquettes, and Slag Brick for Building Purposes (with Discussion)

    By Ernest Stütz

    The problem of increasing blast-furnace efficiency through diminution of flue-dust production while operating with burdens consisting largely of fine ores has of recent years attracted the attention o

    Jan 1, 1914

  • AIME
    Chicago Paper - The Limitations of the Gold Stamp-Mill (See Discussion p. 545)

    By T. A. Rickard

    MILLING is one of the metallurgical arts whereby the extraction of the largest possible proportion of the value in an ore is effected at the least possible expense. Stamp-milling* is that particular p

    Jan 1, 1894

  • RMCMI
    Discussion

    MR. LITTLEJOHN: Have you any maximum length that you make your dust barriers? What I mean by that is, your entries are 10 feet wide, and I believe if I remember right, in your single track entries you

    Jan 1, 1924