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  • AIME
    Labor Laws and Mining in Mexico-II

    By AIME AIME

    FOR the use of workmen and employees, the company should establish a dispensary and a -hospital where workmen who suffer accidents or professional diseases may be taken care of; and at suitable places

    Jan 1, 1937

  • AIME
    Metallurgical Control at the Tooele Concentrator

    By O. E. KEOUGH

    AT the Tooele custom lead-zinc ore concentrator,' two sections, each having a daily capacity of 500 to 600 tons, are operated on slightly different types of ores with but little difference in flo

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    Engineers Need More Than Technical Capacity

    By J. L. Perry

    FOR many years, you and your fellow members of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers have devotedly and ably applied yourselves to the art of making iron and steel. having forem

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AIME
    Physical Data Of Igneous Emanation.

    By Blamey Stevens

    (San Francisco Meeting, October, 1911.) My previous paper is entitled, The Laws of Igneous Emanation Pressure. The present paper lays no claim to the exactitude and completeness of a law, since it is

    Apr 1, 1912

  • AIME
    The Selection And Sizing Of Conveyors And Stackers

    By Lawrence K. Nordell

    This paper reviews practices used In the selection and sizing of belt conveyors and stacker systems commonly used in crushing and grinding plant facilities. Historical and modern methods of sizing thi

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Secondary Copper

    By AIME AIME

    LAST month we published (p. 440) the first half of the L discussion by O. E. Kiessling of the paper on copper by Mr. Vogelstein that appeared in the same-issue, but lack of space made it necessary to

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    Contribution To The Study Of The Pre-Cambrian Rocks Of The Harney Peak District Of South Dakota.

    By Gordon S. Duncan

    (New York Meeting, February, 1912 THE U. S. Geological Survey, I believe, has almost completed a study of the Harney Peak quadrangle, preliminary to the publication of a report on that, district. As

    Jul 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Comments on the Voluntary Subscription

    By Edwin Ludlow

    THE responses to the request of the Finance Committee have been coming in with gratifying results, .but there have also been about a dozen letters received objecting in various ways to the voluntary s

    Jan 1, 1921

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Internal Stresses and Strains in Iron and Steel

    By Henry D. Hibbard

    A NOTED ordnance engineer once said to a friend, in speaking of the production of great steel guns, "How is it? We design our guns with a factor of safety of eight, and the guns burst." The vague way

    Sep 1, 1906

  • AIME
    Potash in World Trade

    By C. C. CONCANNON

    POTASH is an essential. It is necessary as an ingredient in fertilizers or as a plant food, and certainly one of the great problems, and one of increasing gravity, is the maintenance of agricultural f

    Jan 1, 1926

  • AIME
    Economic Notes on Steel-Making Alloys

    By Paul M. Tyler

    OF THE 92 elements generally accepted by chemists as constituting the primary building blocks of matter, all but the very rarest have been investigated with a view to employing them in steel manufactu

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Chattanooga Paper - Gayley's Invention of the Dry Blast

    By R. W. Raymond

    The immense commercial value of the Gayley dry-blast process has been established beyond controversy. The testimony of practical blast-furnace managers, on both sides of the Atlantic, agrees that it r

    Jan 1, 1909

  • AIME
    The Design of Underground Excavations (1bbb18a1-ed73-457f-8650-77e4fdc0f104)

    By N. G. W., Cook

    When an excavation is made underground the original rock stresses are removed from the surfaces of the excavation. These surfaces converge to partially close the excavation and the superincumbent rock

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Sponge Iron and Its Relation to the Steel Industry

    By Edward P. Barrett

    DURING the past few years numerous references have been made in the technical press and Bureau of Mines Bulletin 270 to sponge iron' and so-called "direct metal" processes. The idea has been prev

    Jan 1, 1930

  • AIME
    41. Uranium in the Black Hills

    By Olin M. Hart

    Uranium ores occur in the Lower Cretaceous Inyan Kara group of heterogeneously stratified fluvial and fluvial-marine sandstones in the Black Hills of western South Dakota and northeastern Wyoming. The

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    The Coal Industry?Foreword

    By J. E. Tobey

    UNDER war conditions coal immediately assumes a position of highest importance for coal must carry the basic load for industry. The upward trend in production continued through 1941. Bituminous coal p

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    Phosphate Rock In The United State - A High Bulk, Low Value Commodity In Rapid Expansion

    By John V. Beall

    The forecast of continued growing demand for phosphate, chiefly for fertilizer, has caused a world-wide rush for deposits by a variety of companies many of which have never before mined phosphate rock

    Jan 10, 1966

  • AIME
    The Thirty-Hour Week of the Coal Miner

    By S. A. TAYLOR

    AN EDITORIAL on the Strike Situation in the Coal mining industry in the New York Evening Post of Nov. 4, 1919, gave what purported to be statistics of the Department of Labor, for a period of two week

    Jan 1, 1920

  • AIME
    Discussion - Of Mr. Meissner's Paper, Notes on the Gayley Dry-Air Blast-Process (see Trans., xxxvii., 201)

    J. E. Johnson, Jr., Glen Wilton, Va. (communication to the Secretary*):—Mr. Meissner announces early in his paper that one of its purposes is the discussion of my paper entitled, Notes on the Physical

    Jan 1, 1908