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  • SME
    Producing Portland Cement In Hawaii With Limited Raw Material

    By K. T. Mau

    Hawaii is located approximately 2,500 miles from the mainland, but has basic needs for its thriving developing community. Cement is one of these needs Cement production in Hawaii is not without han

    Jan 1, 1982

  • SME
    Exploration Of 100,000 Acres Of Coal Land

    By Douglas F. Crickmer

    Pocahontas Land Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Norfolk and western Railway Company, owns a 100,000-acre block of coal lands in Martin, Johnson, Pike, Floyd and Lawrence Counties, Kentucky.

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    The Iron And Steel Industry In The Developing Countries - The Case Of Latin America And The Arab Countries

    By Argenis Gamboa

    The Arab community is formed by around twenty countries in Africa and Asia, linked basically by a common language-Arabic - and the same religion, the muslim. They jointly occupy around 12 million squa

    Jan 1, 1979

  • SME
    Seismic Prospecting For Bauxite And Kaolin Eufaula Bauxite District, Alabama ? Introduction

    By T. J. Joiner

    A critical demand exists to develop new mineral resources, and the need for exploration techniques to supplement costly test drilling is becoming; more acute. In the past few years more industries hav

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Limestone And Lime As Reagents In The Aqueous Scrubbing Of Flue Gas For Sulfur Removal

    By Clifford J. Lewis

    The control of sulfur dioxide and fly ash in the emissions from coal-fired boilers is a significant segment of the national environ- mental protection program. Developing technologies to accomplish th

    Jan 1, 1975

  • SME
    Mining And Land Use

    By Robert D. Thomson

    Land use is the single most important element affecting the quality of our physical environment. .The minerals industry is a user of land and by its very nature, directly affects the landscape. Mi

    Jan 1, 1976

  • SME
    Injury Costs And Prevention: The Amax Approach

    By Alan J. Michaels

    The paper addresses the problem of the high costs of accidents ad how AMAX Inc. - a diversified natural resources company - has managed to control its losses through a tri-thrusted approach of: (1) ma

    Jan 1, 1981

  • SME
    Effect Of Dissolved Mineral Species On Flocculation Of Sulfides

    By S. Acar

    The results obtained for the selective flocculation or flotation of natural ores do not usually agree with the corresponding properties of the constituent minerals when present alone. This is mainly d

    Jan 1, 1985

  • SME
    Pneumoconiosis In Coal Miners Of The Appalachian Area

    By Henry N. Doyle

    One can hardly discuss coal pneumoconiosis unless it is placed in the context of the total pneumoconiosis problem in the mining industry. However, it might be well if first we defined a few terms, sin

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    Perlite Processing And Quality Control

    By L. M. Turner

    Perlite is a unique mineral that upon heating expands to about twenty times its original volume. Mining is by open pit method. The processing cycle involves crushing, screening and sizing the ore. An

    Jan 1, 1985

  • SME
    A Man-Made Oil Field

    By Henry W. Brandt

    What is the most practical method for storing a huge quantity of crude oil for a long period of time to assure availability if conditions curtail the source of supply? Underground storage is a logical

    Jan 1, 1973

  • SME
    Foreign Mineral Development: Should We Retreat?

    By Charles Bruce

    Three years ago, at a reception given during the Steel Institute meeting in New York, I heard the remark, "A new formula must be found for foreign investment." This was immediately following the takeo

    Jan 1, 1975

  • SME
    Canadian Potash ? Current Situation And Outlook

    By R. J. Heath

    Potassium, together with nitrogen and phosphorous, is one of the essential nutrients required for growth. All living things need potash and so the major demand for potash (approximately 95% of, total

    Jan 1, 1987

  • SME
    Economic Importance Of Michigan Dune Sands ? Introduction

    By H. L. Bourne

    The sand dunes which line the east shore of Lake Michigan resulted after the last, or Wisconsin, glacial period in Michigan. Melt-water streams carried vast quantities of glacial debris to the near sh

    Jan 1, 1975

  • SME
    Mathematical Modeling Of In-Situ Uranium Leaching (837e8e43-bb20-481e-a25b-582eefa332d4)

    By Paul M. Bommer

    Abstract. This cater presents the development of and results from a computer model of in-situ uranium leaching. This model uses a streamline-concentration balance approach and is useful with a vide ra

    Jan 1, 1979

  • SME
    Using The Sequential Timer Blasting Machine To Comply With State Blasting Regulations

    By Dean E. Albon

    In the late 1940's and early 50's in southern Illinois, the usual open pit blasting in the coal field consisted of one or two rows of churn drilled vertical holes being shot with instant ele

    Jan 1, 1976

  • SME
    Characteristics Of Multiple-Fan Ventilation Networks

    By Y. J. Wang

    The definitions of system pressure loss (mine head) and system resistance, which are traditionally associated with single-fan net- works, are applied to multiple-fan ventilation networks. The system c

    Jan 1, 1983

  • SME
    Natural vs. Synthetic Magnesites in the Manufacture of Refractories

    By O. M. Wicken

    Magnesite has the unique combination of properties that make it useful in a wide variety of metallurgical applications. The use of refractory magnesite has been increasing throughout the world, but th

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Canadian Potash Developments 1965 - Introduction

    By C. M. Bartley

    In world-wide mining circles countries become known by the principal minerals they produce. The production of iron, copper, phosphate and sulphur in the United-States-has-been particularly significant

    Jan 1, 1966

  • SME
    The Future For Educational Training Of Mineral Industry Engineers

    By J. D. Forrester

    I have availed myself of the opportunity to prepare, and to give this talk because, as incumbent Chairman, I am directed by the Bylaws of the Council of Education to make an Annual Report of the Counc

    Jan 1, 1961