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  • CIM
    The Utilisation of Pyrites in Pulp and Acid Manufacture

    By Horace Freeman

    The sulphur consumed in Canadian pulp mills and acid plants is worth approximately three million dollars annually and amounts to one hundred and fifty thousand long tons, all of which is imported from

    Jan 1, 1930

  • CIM
    Financing industrial mineral deposits on the Vancouver Stock Exchange

    By James Mackie

    The Vancouver Stock Exchange (VSE) has been providing venture capital for start-up companies since 1907. Ninety years' experience in the junior mining industry has enabled the VSE to develop policies

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    The Present Status of Geophysics in Canada (ca0eafb9-53af-4309-9891-56c9a04e4d48)

    By A. A. Brant

    Self-potential methods are based ?on measurements on the surface of voltage distributions caused by natural sub-surface oxidation phenomena. The attempt is made to. correlate voltage minima or maxima

    Jan 1, 1942

  • CIM
    Cordilleran Region Red Rose Tungsten Mine

    By A. Sutherland Brown

    "The Red Rose Mine is in the Rocher Deboule Range, 8 miles south of Hazelton. The mill camp (elevation 4,000 feet) is on Red Rose Creek, 11 miles by road from Skeena Crossing. The mine camp is one mil

    Jan 1, 1949

  • CIM
    An Examination of the Failure Mechanisms in Modeled Cemented Paste Backfill

    By R. L. Veenstra

    This paper explores the connection between the stresses observed and the failure mechanisms present in the modelled cemented paste backfill. In order to look at this connection, the authors have used

    Aug 1, 2013

  • CIM
    A novel approach to enclosed gear lubrication on board mining equipment

    By Shek N. Lau, Nicola Samman

    "Enclosed gear cases on board heavy mining equipment have traditionally been lubricated with regular heavy duty gear oils. However, equipment manufacturers, have recommended the use of an ISO-1000 gea

    Jan 1, 1996

  • CIM
    The Role of Geochemistry In Exploration Architecture

    By J. A. C. Fortescue

    During the past decade, geochemical prospecting methods have become important in Canadian mineral exploration. The object of this paper is to discuss the role of geochemical methods in a typical miner

    Jan 1, 1967

  • CIM
    Safety in Coal Mines

    By Gordon MacVean

    The object of this paper is to present for your consideration some of the present-day trends of safety practice in the coal mines in the United States and Canada. Coal mining at its best is a hazardou

    Jan 1, 1931

  • CIM
    Manganese Removal Process: from project status to production CIM

    By Robin Belley

    Outline Introduction Wabush Mines HistoricalBackground Mine and Concentrator at WabushMines High Intensity Magnetic Separators (HIMS) Development of the Manganese Removal Process Pilot Plant T

    May 1, 2011

  • CIM
    New Secondary Mine Vent Fan Design

    "INTRODUCTION Secondary mine ventilation has been hamstrung by the availability of fans that satisfy many competing operational factors. The sometimes legislated requirement of adequate volume to the

    Jan 1, 2019

  • CIM
    Recovery Profiling in a Talc Flotation Roughing Bank

    By P. Blonde

    Recent analysis has suggested that a balanced recovery profile can improve flotation bank performance. Test work was conducted to test the balanced profile concept at the Penhorwood talc mine near Tim

    Aug 1, 2013

  • CIM
    Oil From Coal

    By T. E. Warren, K. W. Bowles

    "IntroductionTHE PROBLEM of producing synthetic liquid fuels from coal and other raw materials is of increasing importance in Canada as well as in the United States. This is due, to a large extent, to

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Metallurgical Coals of the Crowsnest Area

    By E. J. Burrough

    Coal Reserves The Crowsnest Pass coal fields form part of a greater area which comprises the Inner Foothills belt of the Alberta coal fields and the southeastern coal fields of British Columbia. The

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    The Rehabilitation of the Mining Environment in British Columbia

    By J. V. Thirgood

    "Reclamation legislation was introduced in British Columbia in 1969 amidst public concern and controversy. This paper reviews this legislation as it relates to coal mining, and how it is being impleme

    Jan 1, 1971

  • CIM
    Structured Analysis ? An Important Tool for Understanding and Describing Complex Mining Systems

    By Mario A. Morin

    Mine design, planning and scheduling is a very complex, iterative process comprising several interrelated and interdependent activities. Understanding how this process works, identifying the critical

    May 1, 2002

  • CIM
    Updating Bayesian Network for Diagnostic Failure Analysis of Construction Equipment

    By H. Q. Fan

    Construction equipment is an important type of resources of heavy construction contractors. Since equipment breakdowns can cause project delays and significant financial losses, the contractors are ea

    Aug 1, 2013

  • CIM
    Electrostatic Separation of Feldspar and Other Non-Metallic Minerals

    By Grant S. Diamond

    THE BIBLIOGRAPHY on the use of static electricity in mineral beneficiation consists largely of patents. Some references are found in mineral textbooks, but very little data on flow-sheets of commercia

    Jan 1, 1957

  • CIM
    Some Coal-Seam Correlation Problems in Alberta

    By Ralph L. Rutherford

    Geologists or mining engineers familiar with geology are frequently requested by mine operators to give correlation in-formation regarding some mining property with respect to an adjacent area on one

    Jan 1, 1924

  • CIM
    A Geological Approach to Potash Mining Problems in Saskatchewan, Canada

    By Christopher Boys

    "Abstract -Many water inflows in Saskatchewan potash mines are linked to salt anomalies. Potash ore and three anomalies in the PCS Cory potash mine in the Patience Lake Member of the Prairie Evaporite

    Jan 1, 1993

  • CIM
    An Experiment. in Reconnaissance Mapping

    By G. Shaw

    IN recent years, most of the reconnaissance work of the Geological Survey of Canada has been mapped on a scale of 1 inch to 4 miles. Topographic base maps, commonly made from aerial photographs, were

    Jan 1, 1943