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IC 8711 Recycling Trends In The United States: A ReviewBy Max J. Spendlove
This Bureau of Mines publication reviews current recycling trends in the United States. Although near-term prospects are poor for recycling most present wastes, urban refuse is an important exception.
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 8759 Alumina Miniplant Operations - Overall Mass Balance for Clay-HCI Acid LeachingBy Dwight L. Sawyer
To provide technology that can help decrease the dependence of the U.S. aluminum industry on imported bauxite, the main ore of aluminum, the Bureau of Mines is investigating the extraction of aluminum
Jan 1, 1983
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The Carboniferous Basin - Land and GulfBy John G. McCamis
The Maritimes Carboniferous Basin is the largest intermontane basin in the Appalachian Mountain System, occupying a total area of 57,200 square miles and containing up to 30,000 feet of late Devonian
Jan 1, 1973
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Bureau of Mines Seeks Strategic MineralsBy John Wellington Finch
INVESTIGATIONS by the Bureau of Mines of deposits containing strategic minerals were authorized by what has become known as the Strategic Materials Act (Public No. 117, 76th Congress, Chapter 190. 1st
Jan 1, 1939
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Design Of Longwall Extractions Under Flooded Abandoned Workings In The Sydney CoalfieldBy Peter Cain
Longwall extraction in the Phalen Scam in the Sydney Coalfield of Nova Scotia is carried out under flooded abandoned workings in the Harbour Seam 140 m above, and at depth of up to 700 m beneath the A
Jan 1, 1996
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Measuring Mining Safety With Injury Statistics: Lost Workdays As Indicators Of RiskBy Patrick J. Coleman, John C. Kerkering
Problem: Mining in the United States remains one of the most hazardous industries, despite significant reductions in fatal injury rates over the last century. Coal mine fatality rates, for example, ha
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Application of New Explosives Technologies in Australian ConditionsBy Alastair C. Torrance
"A brief review of the Australian mining industry is given followed by a more detailed treatment of a study of the influence of primer Size on explosive performance. This is based on a joint research
Jan 1, 1991
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Economics of the Mineral Industry - Changing Conditions Compel New Concepts of Mineral EngineeringBy P. T. Allsman
INTRODUCTION The honor of being the recipient of the Mining Society's Daniel C. Jackling Award for 1966 imposes on me the responsibility to search for the subject that I would be best qualifie
Jan 1, 1967
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Justifying API Bentonite Rheological Behavior Through Its Forming Size Fractions Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration (8673045d-721a-4112-8198-a3a9a24151ef)By A. A. El-Midany, R. M. Farag, A. M. Salem, S. E. El-Mofty
Bentonite represents one of the main players in the stability of the drilling mud. Its particle size and particle size distribution affect the physical properties of the drilling mud especially the rh
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Application of Chaos Theory to Gas InjectionBy Louis J. Mittoni
"It is well known that gas injection systems can exhibit a wide range of dynamical behaviours, ranging from linear periodic bubbling through to highly complex turbulent jetting. Recently, it has been
Jan 1, 1996
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Coal-Briquetting in the United StatesBy Edward W. Parker
(Toronto Meeting, July, 1907.) NOTE.-The material from which this paper has been prepared was collected for the U. S. Geological Survey Bulletin, Contributions to Economic Geology, 1906, and appears
Sep 1, 1907
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RI 4269 Mining Program, Bureau Of Mines Oil-Shale Project. Rifle, Colo.By E. D. Gardner
The American petroleum industry is supplying the present domestic demand for liquid fuels. Known reserves of petroleum in the ground, however, are limited, and the .cost per barrel of finding new oil
Jan 1, 1948
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Rock Classification For Portal DesignBy G. K. Rogers
The portal, which is the near-horizontal, surface point of entry to an underground excavation, can often be an exceedingly difficult area in terms of ground control. Surface and subsurface failures at
Jan 1, 1989
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RI 8285 Prediction of Failures in Mines - An OverviewBy B. T. Brady
Recent theoretical, experimental, and field studies conducted by the Bureau of Mines suggest that rock failures may be predicted and, in some instances, controlled. Theoretical studies that were later
Jan 1, 1978
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The absorption of oxygen by coal, part IX: comparison of rates of absorption of oxygen by different varieties of coalBy Winmill T. F.
The previous papers have been concerned only with the atmospheric oxidation of coals from the Barnsley Seam, for which it has been shown that an adequate explanation of the origin and nature of gob-fi
Dec 1, 1916
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Blister Flash Smelting - Efficient And Flexible Low-Cost Continuous Copper ProcessBy Jukka Tuominen
The history of making blister copper in an Outokumpu Flash Smelting Furnace dates back to the late 1960?s, when Outokumpu first piloted the Outokumpu Direct Blister (ODB) process. The first commercial
Jan 1, 2005
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Interpretation of Flotation Data for the Design of Process PlantsBy G S. Lane, G D. Richmond, J Dioses
This paper discusses the methods used in the design of flotation plants, including benchscale batch and locked cycle tests and pilot plant trials. Two case studies are presented, one for the Cadia Hil
Jan 1, 2002
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IC 8164 Technology And Use Of Lignite Proceedings: Bureau Of Mines - University Of North Dakota Symposium, Grand Forks, N. Dak., April 1961 - IntroductionIn 1960, the Secretary of the Interior, acting under the provisions of Public Law 454, 80th Congress, appointed a Lignite Advisory Committee to aid in programming research on coal (lignite) of the nor
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 3497 Permissible Electrically Operated PumpsBy H. B. Brunot, L. C. IlsLey, E. J. Gleim
"INTRODUCTION To supply inspectors, safety engineers, and others with detailed information as to the safety features of the various electrically operated machines that have been approved as permissibl
Mar 1, 1940
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RI 4514 Investigation of Capitan Iron Deposits Lincoln County, N. Mex. Supplement to R. I. 4022 (1dd43001-533a-4063-99de-8abf763dedab)By John H. Soule
"Although known since 1902, the Capitan iron deposits have not been mined, mainly because of the low grade of the ore. Only a small amount of exploratory work has been done since the discovery. C. H.
Aug 1, 1949