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  • AUSIMM
    Modern Gold Plants - A Design Overview

    By L G. B Wadley

    The Australian gold industry has made large steps forward in the last few years. This progress has been driven by improvements in mining and processing technology, the high price of gold and by a favo

    Jan 1, 1990

  • NIOSH
    Stoping Methods And Costs - Introduction

    By Chas. F. Jackson

    This bulletin is one of a series of Bureau of Mines reports dealing with mining methods, practices, and costs. A study of this subject was undertaken by the Bureau in cooperation with a large number o

    Jan 1, 1936

  • SME
    Automated Conditions Mining at Sylvite

    By William G. Schultz

    Sylvite of Canada, a wholly owned subsidiary of Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Co., operates an 8000 TPD potash mine and refinery located nine miles North East of Rocanville, Saskatchewan. Prior to Hu

    Jan 1, 1972

  • ISEE
    New Photo-Optic System for Adaptation to Measure VOD

    By William H. Snyer

    A relatively inexpensive, very fast response photo-optic/fiberoptic system has been conceived, constructed and employed by Denver Research Institute (DRI) to measure charge breakout uniformity on the

    Jan 1, 1990

  • NIOSH
    IC 8431 Transportation Of Mineral Commodities On The Inland Waterways Of The South-Central States

    By Frank B. Fulkerson

    Barge traffic on the Nation's inland waterways over the past 15 years has been increasing at a rate much faster than intercity freight traffic by all modes, largely due to the growing consumption

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Instrumentation, Automation, and Process Control (666a6871-2a0b-4569-b186-7269b1528cd0)

    By Kenneth K. Humphreys

    INTRODUCTION What is automation? Why automate? Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary defines automation as "the automatically controlled operation of an apparatus, process, or system by mechani

    Jan 1, 1979

  • NIOSH
    OFR-131-84 Design, Develop And Demonstrate The Use Of Hollow Cutter Bars/Evaluation Of Wet Bar Techniques

    By Terry Muldoon

    In conventional noncoal, room-and-pillar mining, the cutting machine is frequently a major source of airborne dust. Water is often used for dust control. An evaluation of typically used water systems

    Jan 1, 1983

  • AIME
    Part II – February 1969 - Papers - The Massive Transformation in Copper-Zinc Alloys

    By John W. Cahn, David A. Karlyn, Morris Cohen

    The massive B(bcc) — am (fcc) transformation in Cu-Zn alloys has been studied isothermally by pulse-heating the retained ß phase from room temperature to the reaction temperatures. The transformatio

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AUSIMM
    New Technologies for efficient utilization of coal in the iron and steel industry

    By Brotzmann K, Turner RE, Philp DK, Rusden RC

    New approaches in the last decade have led to the supplemental use of raw coal as a direct energy source in several iron and steelmaking processes. The dependence on more expensive coke and electr

    Jan 1, 1986

  • NIOSH
    Bulletin 177 The Decline and Ultimate Production of Oil Wells, With Noes on the Valuation of Oil Porperties

    By Carl H. Beal

    The oil industry in the United States is further advanced than in any other country, because of American initiative and the development of industries dependent in some way on petroleum or its products

    Jan 1, 1919

  • NIOSH
    Accidents From Hoisting And Haulage At Metal And Nonmetallic Mines - Metal- And Nonmetallic-Mine Accident-Prevention Course - Section 3 - Purpose And Scope

    The first metal-mine accident-prevention course was prepared and published in 1942-45 as a series of seven miners' circulars (Nos. 51-57). The scope of the course has been broadened, revised, and

    Jan 1, 1955

  • TMS
    New Reactor Concepts For Direct Coal-Based Continuous Steelmaking (Invited)

    By Noel A. Warner

    Modern steelmaking is based on direct use of oxygen in high intensity batch reactors. A totally new approach is proposed in this paper, based on the view that pursuit of high intensity is unlikely to

    Jan 1, 2003

  • AIME
    Oil Production in the Upper Texas Gulf Coast during 1945

    By P. B. Leavenworth

    Development in the Upper Texas Gulf Coast during 1945 resulted in the discovery of 23 new fields; one Miocene, eight Frio, three Cockfield-Yegua and eleven along the Wilcox trend. The Wilcox trend app

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Discussions - Of Mr. Woo's Paper on Silver-Mining and Smelting in Mongolia (see p. 755)

    MR. Woo's succinct description of the mining and smelting of silver-lead in Mongolia, with the roasting-and-reduction process and cupellation, has much interest as a picture of methods that not o

    Jan 1, 1903

  • NIOSH
    OFR-3-79 Study Of Noise Sources In A Cross Section Of Taconite Plants

    Four taconite plants were studied to establish the extent of hazard to plant personnel which exists based on long-term exposure to noise. The criteria for evaluation include the 90 dBA and 85 dBA summ

    Jan 1, 1977

  • CIM
    On the Inorganic Origin of the Hydro-Carbons

    By Jacob W. Young

    A casual reading of the geological literature extant to-day would give one the impression that carbon is an element which by some chance or another always existed at or near the surface of the earth,

    Jan 1, 1925

  • CIM
    Chapter 13. Miscellaneous Royalty Provisions

    By Karl J. C. Harries

    13.1. RIGHT TO RECEIVE ROYALTY CONTRACTUAL ONLY1

    Jan 1, 2003

  • NIOSH
    OFR-145-77 Improvements For Mine Carrier Phone Systems

    By Richard H. Spencer

    The purpose of this program was threefold: (1) to identify the symptoms of poor or inadequate performance of trolley carrier phone systems; (2) to assess the root causes of performance difficu

    Jan 1, 1977

  • NIOSH
    An Appraisal Of Minerals Availability For 34 Commodities ? Introduction ? Program Overview

    The Bureau of Mines, through its Minerals Availability Program (MAP), investigates the mineral supply potential of the United States and market economy countries (MEC's) for a number of minerals

    Jan 1, 1987

  • NIOSH
    RI 4465 The "Carbon-Oxygen Complex" As A Possible Initiator Of Explosions And Formation Of Carbon Monoxide In Compressed-Air Systems

    By H. W. Busch

    In the course of examinations by representatives of the Bureau of Mines of several compressed-air systems in which explosions had occurred, samples were obtained of the carbon deposits that are formed

    Jan 1, 1949