Techniques Of Mineral Exploitation Of The Future

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 32
- File Size:
- 377 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1947
Abstract
WE have come a long way since the order of the day was the chance discovery of mineral deposits, breaking rock with fire and water, melting metals in open fires in holes in the ground or in primitive furnaces, digging pits to collect. oil seepages, burning eroded coal outcrops to develop heat, and so on. During the past 5500 years, gradual improvements in methods and equipment have come about, explosives have been developed and used, steel has been used in increasing quantities and effectiveness as its physical and chemical characteristics, and composition have been altered and made to serve specific ends, hand equipment has given way to almost completely mechanized operation Thus, by the aid of mechanical equipment, one person is now able to move several thousand times as much material as one person was able to move a relatively few years ago. When this Institute was formed 75 years ago, the Suez Canal had been open to traffic but three years. It had taken ten years to complete and was built under the direction of French engineers by workers of whom many were girls. During the first four years of construction, these workers dug up the sand with their fingers, threw it into rush baskets, carried the load a hundred feet or so and dumped it 2 (With the termination of forced labor, dredgers completed the digging of the channel.) At the present time there is in use in the United
Citation
APA:
(1947) Techniques Of Mineral Exploitation Of The FutureMLA: Techniques Of Mineral Exploitation Of The Future. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.