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  • AIME
    Standing and Special Committees (867fa6ad-8783-421f-ad89-3af880a17222)

    Executive HOWARD N EAVENSON, Chairman FREDERICK M. BECKET EDGAR RICKARD ERLE V. DAVELER WILLIAM WRAITH Finance HENRY KRUMB Chairman PAUL D. MERICA J V W REYNDERS H G MOULTON, Consultant Admiss

    Jan 1, 1935

  • AIME
    Part V – May 1968 - Papers - Dysprosium-Lead System

    By K. A. Gschneidner, O. D. McMasters, T. J. O’Keefe

    X-ray diffraction, differential thermal, ad rnetallo-graphic methods were used to establish the Dy-Pb Phase diagram. Lead additions lower the 1377°C transformation temperature of dysprosium to 1360°C

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Extractive Metallurgy Division - A Thermodynamic Investigation of the System Silver-Silver Sulphide

    By T. Rosenqvist

    From the chemical, metallurgical, and mineralogical points of view, the importance of thermodynamic data for metal-sulphides and sulphur dissolved in molten metal has long been realized. Such data wil

    Jan 1, 1950

  • AIME
    70. The Chromite Deposits of the Stillwater Complex, Montana

    By Everett D. Jackson

    The largest deposits of chromite in the United States occur in tabular layers in the lower part of the Stillwater Complex, Montana. Nearly 900,000 long tons of chromite concentrates have been produced

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Identification of Mixtures of Waters from Chemical Water Analyses

    By J. C. McKinnell

    The appraisal of an oil lease may often be mad,? through production decline analysis, which requires description of the functional relationship between the oil production rate and either cumulative pr

  • AIME
    Standing and Special Committees (3f6dfc77-f875-4396-a441-3af8eb1039cc)

    EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS C. H. MATHEWSON. Chairman PAUL D. MERICA, Vice-Chairman CHESTER A. FULTON CARROLL A. GARNER H. Y. WALKER FINANCE COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTOR

    Jan 1, 1943

  • AIME
    Labrador-Nod America's Newest Great Iron On Field

    By J. A. Retty

    IN the Labrador iron fields two concessions, totaling nearly 24,000 square miles, have been staked out and commercial-grade deposits delineated. The Newfoundland-Labrador concession, owned by the Labr

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Secrecy In The Arts.

    By DR. DOUGLAS

    Discussion of the Paper of Dr. Douglas, presented at the Toronto Meeting of the Institute, July, 1907 (Trans., xxxviii., 455 to 471). EDGAR HALL, Silverspur, Queensland, Australia (communication t

    Sep 1, 1908

  • AIME
    Institute of Metals Division - The Zirconium-Hafnium-Hydrogen System at Pressures Less Than 1 Atm: Part II – A Structural Investigation

    By J. Alfred Berger, O. M. Katz

    Selected samples of hydrided Zr-Hf alloys were rapidly quenched to voom temperature and exrtrnined metallographically, by X-ray diffraction, and through micro hardness studies to confirm high-temperut

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
    Minerals Beneficiation - The Role of Inorganic Ions in the Flotation of Beryl

    By V. M. Karve, K. K. Majundar, K. V. Viswanathan, J. Y. Somnay

    The effect of calcium, magnesium, iron (both ferrous and ferric) and aluminum ions, which are commonly encountered in a typical beryl ore, was studied in the flotation of pure beryl, soda-feldspar and

    Jan 1, 1965

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Iron and Steel - An Introduction to the Iron-chromium-nickel Alloys (with Discussion)

    By Edgar C. Bain, William E. Griffiths

    The results of an inquiry into the structural nature of some 70 iron alloys containing both nickel and chromium over a considerable range of concentration are briefly described in this paper. This stu

    Jan 1, 1927

  • AIME
    Books For Engineers

    By Reinhardt Schuhmann JR

    Metallurgical Engineering Volume I, by Reinhardt Schuhmann, Jr. Addison-Wesley Press. $7.50, 390 pp., 1952. -This first volume, engineering principles, of a two volume work, is intended by the author

    Jan 1, 1952

  • AIME
    Heat Treatment of Aluminum-alloy Castings - Discussion

    G. K. BURGESS, ? Washington, D. C.-At the Bureau of Standards it was decided, in order to study the high-aluminum end of these curves, that efforts should be made to prepare pure aluminum, and the pro

    Jan 12, 1919

  • AIME
    Mechanization Continues to Cut Coal Mining Costs

    By R. E. Salvoti

    IN underground coal mining, the increasing trend towards mechanical methods is ever apparent. Figures for 1939 showed that 28 per cent of the total bituminous coal production was mined mechanically 19

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AIME
    18. Geology of the Pea Ridge Iron Ore Body

    By John A. Emery

    The Pea Ridge iron ore deposit near Sullivan, Missouri, is a dike-like mass of magnetite enclosed in Precambrian porphyries. The ore body tops at the Precambrian surface at a depth of 1300 feet below

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    The Iron-Ore Supply Of The United States.*

    By C. WIFLARD HAYES

    (New Haven Meeting, February, 1909.) I DESIRE to make it perfectly clear at the outset that I fully realize the hazardous nature of any attempt to estimate the quantity of iron-ore or any other miner

    Apr 1, 1909

  • AIME
    Coal Division Arranges Hazleton Meeting, Oct. 14-15

    By AIME AIME

    THE Hazleton district of the Pennsylvania Anthracite Region will be the scene Oct. 14 and 15 of the fall meeting of the Coal Division and the Pennsylvania Anthracite Section. Here, coal mining has bee

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    A. I. M. E. Technical Publications and Preprints 1932

    All the TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS and PREPRINTS published in 1932 are available at Institute headquarters. They are also on file in public,, university and technical libraries and, when so indicated in t

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Future of Coal for Railway Fuel

    By Eugene McAuliffe

    AS anthracite is no longer used to a marked extent by the rail- ways of the United States (1,513,000 tons in 1933), that portion of the mining industry engaged in the production of bituminous coal is,

    Jan 1, 1936