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  • AIME
    Absorption of Sulfur During Melting in the Open-Hearth Furnace

    By C. H. Herty

    AN earlier paper on absorption of sulfur by the slag in the basic open-hearth furnace included a brief discussion of the absorption of sulfur during the melting period. The data available at that time

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals - Rock Hardness as a Factor in Drilling Problems

    By W. B. Mather

    A SURVEY of the technical literature concerned with oil well drilling methods and particularly with rate of penetration by various cutting media on different types of rock provides a mass of conflicti

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Experiences With Acid Mine-Water Drainage In Tri-State Field

    By O. W. Bilharz

    INTRODUCTION ACID mine-water drainage is a serious problem with many mines in the Tri-State zinc and lead mining district. Particularly is this true when large volumes must be considered in unwater

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    Coal - Improvements in Plant and Operations at Pueblo Coal Washery

    By J. D. Price, W. M. Bertholf

    Making maximum possible use of available equipment and material, CF&I placed a high-efficiency, high-capacity washery unit in the existing buildings to gain simplified operation, reduced manpower requ

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - Habit Phenomenon in the Martensitic Transformation

    By E. S. Machlin, Morris Cohen

    GRENINGER and Troiano' were the first to establish the fact that the habit planes of mar-tensitic products are usually planes of high indices. In steels containing 0.55 to 1.4 pct C, the habit pl

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Determination of Graphite in Pig-Iron

    By P. W. Shimer

    The purpose of this note is to call attention to a source of error in the determination of graphitic carbon, made by the usual method of solution in hydrochloric acid. Although the method is tedious,

    Jan 1, 1896

  • AIME
    Buffalo Paper - Analysis of Blast-Furnace Gas While Blowing In

    By Ralph H. Sweetser

    When a furnace-manager is '(blowing in," he generally has no time to consider the composition of the waste gas, and does not bother with it, except to take care that he does not get " gassed." Mo

    Jan 1, 1899

  • AIME
    Drying and Processing of Pebble Phosphate in the Florida Field

    By Charles Becker

    THE practice of drying phosphate in Florida is as old as the industry, which began a little more than half a century ago. The methods, however, have changed considerably. At first, the natural process

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Metallurgy of Nickel in the United States

    By William P. Blake

    The metallic element Nickel, discovered by Cronstedt the mineralogist, in the year 1751, as a peculiar metal in kupfer-nickel, remained for a long time comparatively unknown in its true charac-

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Distribution of Lead Impurity in a Copper-refining Furnace Bath

    By Walter Scott

    THE removal of lead by fire refining methods from copper of electrolytic quality is growing in importance. Particularly is this true of the refining of secondary copper and copper cathodes obtained fr

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    San Francisco Paper - Present-Day Problems in California Gold-Dredging

    By Charles Janin

    The first successful bucket-elevator dredge to operate in California was put in comnlisvion wt Oroville in March, 1898. There had been numerous previous attempts at dredging, but noue of the earlier b

    Jan 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Production - Domestic - Oil and gas Development in Mississippi during 1936

    By Henry N. Toler

    Oil and gas development in Mississippi during 1936 was about the same as during the past three or four years, with less drilling activity in the proven fields; although at the end of the year there wa

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    The Jurassic As A Source Of Oil In Western Cuba

    By Albert Wright

    VEINS of asphalt fill and seal vertical fault fissures at the surface of a large domal structure near Bejucal, Havana Province (about 19 miles south of Havana), so this structure was chosen, by Barnab

    Jan 3, 1925

  • AIME
    New York Paper - The Mechanical Preparation of Ores in Sardinia

    By Erminio Ferraris

    The development of the mining industry in Sardinia dates from the application of the mining law of 1859, which, following the example of the French mining law of 1810, declared prospecting to be free,

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    New York Paper - Present Trend in Treatment of Complex Ores

    By G. L. Oldright

    Nearly all of the present schemes for treating complex (i. e. lead-silver-zinc-copper) ores are based on the idea that lead holds, and will hold for some time, the strongest economic place from the vi

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Drying and Processing of Pebble Phosphate in the Florida Field

    By Charles Becker

    THE practice of drying phosphate in Florida is as old as the industry, which began a little more than half a century ago. The methods, however, have changed considerably. At first, the natural process

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Structural Steels and Light-weight Metals in the Transportation Industry

    By Horace Knerr

    The term. "high-yield-strength," used in the title of Dr. Gillett's paper (p. 40) is obviously relative. His discussion is limited to improved steels intended to compete with the low-cost, low-ca

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Present Condition Of The Mining And Metallurgical Industries In Germany

    The following paragraphs have been extracted from a recent publication of the U. S. Department of Commerce; Miscellaneous Series, No. 65, " German Trade' and the War, " which portrays the industr

    Jan 8, 1918

  • AIME
    Geophysics - Heavy Metals in Stream Sediment as an Exploration Guide

    By H. Bloom, H. E. Hawkes

    STREAMS and rivers are the principal channels into which the weathering products of rocks and their contained ores are funneled. The inorganic load of a stream system is a crude sample of all the eart

    Jan 1, 1957

  • AIME
    Electrochemical Behavior Of The Lead-Tin Couple In Carbonate Solutions

    By Harold Markus, Gerhard Derge, Arthur Grobe

    THE high corrosion resistance possessed by tin under most circumstances, combined with its generally satisfactory appearance and useful physical properties, has led to many and varied uses for the met

    Jan 1, 1942