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  • AIME
    Underground Space For American Industry

    By GEORGE A. KIERSCH

    The awesome destructive power of known and projected weapons of war presages a new need for geologists and engineers, who may be called upon to locate vital industry underground, thereby protecting it

    Jan 1, 1949

  • AIME
    High Lights of Rhodesian Copper Mining

    By A. CHESTER BEATTY

    SO much has been written about African, and particularly about Northern Rhodesian, copper during the past two years that I feel safe in assuming that you are familiar with the general background of th

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Logging and Log Interpretation - SP Log Interpretation in Shaly Sands

    By L. J. M. Smits

    A theoretical equation is developed describing membrane potentials of shaly sands as a function of the cation-exchange capacity per unit pore volume of the rock and saturating water salinity. This equ

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Twinning and Fracture in Tungsten Single Crystals at Room Temperature

    By Ursula E. Wolff

    Il.lechanica1 twins have been observed in brigsten single crystals of a variety of axial orientations defornzed at room temperature in tension or bending. The twins formed near the final fracture and

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Plattsburgh Paper - Note on a Collection of Tertiary Fossil Plants from Potosí Bolivia

    By N. L. Britton

    About two years ago Dr. Newberry referred to me for study a considerable collection of fossil plants sent him by Dr. Arthur F. Wendt, engineer of the silver mines " El Cerro Rico de Potosi" in Bolivia

    Jan 1, 1893

  • AIME
    Part X - Metallothermic Reduction of Beryllium Oxide

    By R. E. Mussler, F. E. Block, T. T. Campbell

    An exploratovy study was made to deternzine the feasibility of preparing beryllium by the metallother-. mic reduction of beryllium oxide. The procedure involved heating a relatively nonvolatile metal

    Jan 1, 1967

  • AIME
    Zinc - Electrolytic Zinc at Corpus Christi, Texas

    By George H. Cunningham, Allen C. Jephson

    The plant for production of electrolytic zinc recently erected by the American Smelting and Rcfining Co. is situated along Nueces Bay, on the Gulf Coast, some 5 miles west by rail and highway from the

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Development and Use of Industrial Explosives

    By Arthur La Motte

    I NDUSTRIAL explosives, as distinguished from military explosives, include high explosives and blasting powder. The high explosives which are best known are straight dynamite, gelatin dynamite, ammoni

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Iron Ores on the West Coast of Chile

    By Joseph Daniels

    IN connection with a study of the feasibility of establishing a blast-furnace industry in the Puget Sound region of Washington, possible sources of ore supplies along the Pacific rim were investigated

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    World Minerals ? War and Postwar ? Wartime Problems Met by the Government ? Private Industry Will Have Changed Conditions to Meet

    By Alan M. Bateman

    POSSIBLE postwar trends of the more important world minerals will be determined in part by their present world position and by the acts and forces that have operated during the war period, so it is de

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Geology - Time Aspects of Geothermometry

    By R. J. P. Lyon

    It is usually assumed1,2 that ore deposition is relatively slow, taking place over tens of thousands of years. Yet many syntheses and phase changes can be completed in the laboratory in a matter of ho

    Jan 1, 1960

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Geology and Mineral Deposits of Costa Rica ' s South-Central Osa Peninsula Placer Gold District

    By Stanley W. Ivosevic

    The South-Central Osa Peninsula produced around 30,000 kg (100,000 troy oz) of gold since prehistoric times. Gold freed by erosion from quartz lodes in the Mesozoic Nicoya ophiolite complex was reconc

    Jan 1, 1980

  • AIME
    Geological Mine-Maps and Sections

    By D. W. Brunton

    THE maps of our large mines are usually prepared with the greatest care; and it is somewhat singular that, in comparison with the great amount of time and money spent in surveying and platting, so lit

    Sep 1, 1905

  • AIME
    Strip Coal Mining in the Southwest.

    By K. A. SPENCER

    THE production of soft coal from strip mines in the United States has shown a remarkable growth in the last sixteen years, increasing from one and one-quarter million tons in 1914 to approximately twe

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Engineering Education

    By AIME AIME

    AN unusual interest in the question of orienting the young college man in the mineral industry was shown in a well-attended session* of the Engineering Education Committee on Monday afternoon. About

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    A New Theory Of The Genesis Of Brown Hematite Ores; And A New Source Of Sulphur Supply.

    By H. M. Chance

    Discussion of the paper of H. M. Chance, Bi-Monthly Bulletin, No. 23, September, 190S, pp. 791-808. CHARLES CATLETT, Staunton,Va. (communication to the Secretary *):-Mr. Chance's suggestions tha

    Nov 1, 1908

  • AIME
    The Public Relations of the Engineer

    By Francis A. Thomson

    T HE engineer of today is by his training, by his traditions, and by the service which he must render, irrevocably committed to taking his part in public life along with the members of the older profe

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    Progress in the Reduction and Refining of Copper, 1929

    By Frederick Laist

    THE past year has witnessed no radical changes in methods for the reduction and refining of copper. The Carson litigation was finally brought to a close ant1 the copper smelter is again free to introd

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Metallurgical Fundamentals-Present and Future

    By Charles G. Maier

    SCIENCE beginning in rational observation came of age, when its devotees first began to measure and count. It has been said that the most striking aspect, of science today is its growing abstraction,

    Jan 1, 1931