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  • AIME
    New York Paper - Testing Artillery Cartridge Cases (with Discussion)

    By J. Burns Read, S. Tour

    It is the purpose of this paper to summarize, as far as possible, the metallurgical information and experience gained by the Ordnancc Department, during the war, in the manufacture of artillery cartri

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Ferrous Production Metallurgy in 1946

    By J. S. Marsh, T. B. Winkler

    THE past year, the first full one of peacetime production, proved that the process of beating swords into plowshares has increased in complexity in step with civilization. Further, judging by various

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals Record Progress Over a Wide Front

    By Oliver Bowles

    GLASS razor blades, glass chairs, and marble window panes attest that creative genius was still active in 1935. Many less striking, though doubtless more important, developments are to be recorded for

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Institute Reports on Industrial Relations

    By SIDNEY ROLLE

    ACURSORY glance through the literature on the subject reveals that the ablest minds in the land are devoting themselves to the great question of labor, of which employment is one of the fundamentals.

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
    Hydrometallurgy of Uranium

    By R. A. Foos

    During the radium boom in the early part of the twentieth century, the basic chemistry of uranium was fairly well defined. Uranium production has progressed from the status of a radium by-product to a

    Sep 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Flotation Of Pyrite

    By Walter Morley

    This paper is a record of the first of a series of tests on sulfide minerals to be made by the metallurgical department f the University of California. The purpose of the tests here recorded is to det

    Jan 7, 1921

  • AIME
    All Resources Pooled to Produce Aviation Gasoline, Toluene, and Other War Necessities

    By Walter Miller

    NOW, after a year's continued impact of war, the task of the petroleum-refining industry stands out clearly and looms up in larger aspect. This time it is not, as it was so largely in the first W

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Part IV – April 1968 - Communications - Dilation of Nickel Lattice by Dissolved Carbon

    By Y. Nakada, E. J. Fasiska, A. S. Keh, L. Zwell

    DURING an investigation of solid-solution hardening of nickel by carbon,' we found that there were no reliable data on the dilating effect of dissolved carbon on the unit cell of nickel. Bernier2

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Problems of Production Control

    By Ralph M. Roosevelt

    IN AS MUCH as our Institute, by tradition, never adopts any official view of matters upon which difference of opinion exists, it may be taken for granted that the duty of its Production Control Commit

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Petroleum as a Source of Chemicals

    By H. D. Wilde

    GREAT emphasis is being placed today on petroleum as a source of chemicals. Such prominence is well merited, for rapid strides have been made in developing processes for the conversion of petroleum in

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Unwatering the Osceola Lode

    By R. R. Spencer, C. A. Campbell, R. J. Marcotte, A. S. Kromer, P. H. Ostlender

    Calumet Div. of Calumet & Hecla Inc. is engaged primarily in mining, milling, and smelting the native copper ores of northern Michigan. The copper occurs in fragmental tops of lava flows and in certai

    Apr 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Cleveland Paper - The Velocity of Blast-Furnace Gases

    By John A. Church

    The Lake Superior blast-furnaces probably represent the maximum economy of fuel possible in this country. They smelt an ore which is very rich and easily reducible, and as the small amount of gangue p

  • AIME
    Pure Coal as a Basis for Classification

    By F. V. Tideswell

    THE suggestion, which appears to find increasing favor, that the elementary composition of coals should be used as the basis of their classification, makes it important that our methods of expressing

    Jan 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Shotcrete Gives Stronger Support At Lower Cost

    By R. S. Hendricks

    During the past two years, Hecla Mining Co. has used shotcrete for ground support purposes with substantial cost savings. Hecla's experience indicates that shotcrete is an extremely effective gro

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Basaltic Zones As Guides To Ore-Deposits In The Cripple Creek District, Colorado

    By E. A. Stevens

    IT has been ascertained in recent years that certain rocktypes, geological formations and structural conditions may be used as fairly reliable guides, when prospecting in recognized mineral belts or m

    Jan 1, 1913

  • AIME
    Stone Industry Production Problems Call For Research

    By Nelson Severinghaus

    Consolidated Quarries Corp. must conduct operations for an average sales price of $1.25 per ton, about the same price at which stone was sold 25 years ago when the dollar was worth twice what it is no

    Mar 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Atlantic City Paper - Notes on the Geological Structure of the Caucasus Range Along the Georgia Military Road

    By Persifor Frazer

    The structure of the Caucasus as made out by the Russian geologists and represented in Pamphlet XXII. of the Livret Guide, by Loewinson-Lessing, is an overturned anticlillal from Lars to Passanour; a

    Jan 1, 1899

  • AIME
    The Velocity of Blast-Furnace Gas

    By John A. Church

    THE Lake Superior blast-furnaces probably represent the maximum economy of fuel possible in this country. They smelt an ore which is very rich and easily reducible, and as the small amount of gangue p

    Jan 1, 1876

  • AIME
    How to Improve Your Institute

    By AIME AIME

    HEREWITH is presented a preliminary report of a special committee, consisting of Erle V. Daveler, Paul D. Merica, and C. H. Mathewson (chairman), dealing with sundry matters of which many are of vital

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Mining Engineering Notebook – Cage to Hoisting Engineer – Emergency Communication

    By W. A. Boyer, A. W. Beck

    At the Morning mine of American Smelting & Refining Co. it was particularly important that there be a means of signaling the engineer from the moving cage in the shaft. Because of the shifting ground

    Sep 1, 1955