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Construction Issues Encountered In The Installation Of Building Foundations As Ground-Source Heat ExchangersBy W. Zitz
Incorporation of heat exchangers into drilled shaft foundations is a novel approach to both improve the energy efficiency of building heat pump systems and provide necessary structural support using t
Jan 1, 2011
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Simulation For The Design Of Ball Mills For Coal Grinding ? IntroductionBy Reed S. C. Rogers
The most widely used machines for grinding coal to the sizes prescribed for the pulverized coal firing of furnaces, boilers, and kilns are the vertical ball-race, roller-race and roller-bowl types of
Jan 1, 1986
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Challenges Facing The Australian Coal Industry - 1. IntroductionBy Allister McLeod
Coal is expected to play a major role in energy supply in the next 20 years. Oil is a convenient and still reasonably abundant fuel. However, its major sources of supply are regions where there is ner
Jan 1, 1982
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Uses Of Jet Pulverization ? IntroductionBy Hugh Boyd
Jet pulverization is a relatively new tool for fine grinding. It is not yet in general use in the mining and ore dressing fields, since most of the requirements in these areas have been for relatively
Jan 1, 1969
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Sewage Tunnel Under EstuaryBy Enrique Fernandez
The success of the excavation of a sewage tunnel in a very extreme geological conditions, from river deposits and sandy layers to hard dolomite, and several meters below the estuary under the sea wate
Jan 1, 2003
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Design of Bored Tunnels on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, UKBy Eddie Woods, Jon Hurt, Roger May, Paul Watson
The Channel Tunnel Rail Link (CTRL) will be Britain’s first major new railway for over a century—a high-speed line running for 109km (68 miles) between St. Pancras station in London and the Channel Tu
Jan 1, 2003
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Controlled Blasting Methods for Excavation of Rock and Concrete in Critical Locations of Tunnels and ShaftsBy Gordon F. Revey
In underground construction and mining work, situations occasionally occur where hard rock or concrete must be excavated at locations near critical structures or utilities. Fearing damage from blastin
Jan 1, 2001
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Geology And Exploration Of The Kelsey Lake Diamondiferous Kimberlites, ColoradoBy Howard G. Coopersmith
A resource of low grade good quality diamonds has been discovered through the Diamond Company NL-Moonstone Diamond Corp. Joint Venture. A limited bulk sample diamond test of two large kimberlite pipes
Jan 1, 1991
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Process Analysis Of A Fluidized-Bed Coal DryerBy J. C. Agarwal
A significant portion of the, coal mined by U. S. Steel is beneficiated to upgrade the quality of the resultant coke to meet blast-furnace requirements. Primarily because of degradation from modern me
Jan 1, 1963
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Selection Of A Cutoff Grade Strategy For An Open Pit MineBy G. A. Hufford
The cutoff grade applied to a disseminated orebody mined by open pit affects both the waste ratio, hence the cost of producing ore, and the ore grade, hence the quantity of metal recovered. As such it
Jan 1, 1986
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A Campaign For The Elimination Of Accidents At The Lavender Pit Phelps Dodge Corporation, Copper Queen Branch Bisbee, ArizonaBy W. K. Pincock
Accident prevention can be portrayed as a science that deals with facts and natural phenomena and must be dealt with in the same manner as any other operating problem. Safety at the Copper Queen Branc
Jan 1, 1959
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Asarco Mineral Creek TunnelBy Shane Yanagisawa
The Mineral Creek Diversion Project is at the Asarco Ray Mine Complex, about128 km (80 miles) east of Phoenix, Arizona. The new tunnel will intercept the waters of Mineral Creek about 2,134 m (7,000 f
Jan 1, 2001
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Profile, Strain, And Time Characteristics Of Subsidence From Coal Mining In IllinoisBy Robert A. Bauer
Two basic types of subsidence occur in Illinois: pit and sag / trough. Pits develop over mines less than 165 feet deep and where relatively incompetent strata are found over the mines. Sag subsidence
Jan 1, 1982
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Review Of Empirical Slope DataBy R. J. Lutton
The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers is seeking empirical slope data from mining companies and other organizations to help establish guides for engineering Judgment in crater excavation for canals and ot
Jan 1, 1968
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Revamping Preparation Plants To Improve Maintenance And Meet Current Market DemandsBy V. D. Hanson
When maintenance of a plant or operation is under discussion immediately three "M's", all in short supply, are brought to mind - money, men and markets. This paper will present what currently is
Jan 1, 1963
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Electricity (CHAPTER 13)By Wayne P. Myers
Electricity, as normally thought of by a layman's definition, is a man- made force that has no color, no odor, is not visible, cannot be heard, yet man can control it and make it perform his work
Jan 1, 1981
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Continuous Mining in the Pittsburgh SeamBy Martin Valeri
The operation described in-this paper will be confined to the Nemacolin Mine of The Buckeye Coal company, Nemacolin, Pennsylvania.' This mine is-located on the Monongahela River approximately six
Jan 1, 1961
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"Rapid Advance of Coal Production...to a Certain Extent"By Harry J. Fitzgerald
During World War II mining machinery manufacturers were limited in the development of their product improvement programs. Following the war, however, the ideas and intentions of both the users and man
Jan 1, 1970
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Open Pit Mining Of Phosphate Rock In Deep OverburdenBy M. P. McArthur
General mining practices at W. R. Grace's Bonny Lake mine are much the same as those used in open pit phosphate mines in Central Florida, except for the difference in the depth of the overburden
Jan 1, 1962
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Environmental And Economic Risk Assessment/Management In Mine DevelopmentBy W. J. Roberds
A formal and explicit yet cost-effective approach is proposed to ensure that decisions made during mine development are optimum (with respect to their ultimate consequences) as well as defensible. Thi
Jan 1, 1992