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Non-Destructive Testing & Cable Fault Locating with High-Voltage Direct CurrentBy Harold N. Miller
Lost time and services caused by electrical equipment breakdown or cable faults can often be substantially reduced by the use of direct-current high-voltage testing as a maintenance tool. This paper d
Jan 1, 1965
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Anglo-American ResponsibilitiesBy Max W. Ball
YOU have been kind enough to ask me to speak to you on "The War and Anglo-American Relations." A speaker always takes the liberty of putting his own interpretation on the scope of his subject. I am go
Jan 1, 1941
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Uranium Milling Technology - Trends in Flowsheet DesignBy G. F. Colborne, A. Thunaes
"When the Canadian uranium milling plants went into operation during the early 1950's, they utilized flowsheets developed at the Radioactivity Division of the Federal Mines Branch in Ottawa. Since the
Jan 1, 1968
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No. 6 Concentrator Operations at. Brunswick Mining and Smelting Corporation LimitedBy R. T. Erskine
"The No. 6 orebody is located 6 miles from the main op.eration of Brunswick Mining and Smelting Corporation Limited and includes open-pit and primary gyratory crushing facilities. Ore is transferred b
Jan 1, 1971
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A Practical Method to Control the Formation of Sinkhole Subsidence – The Dolaei Road Tunnel Case StudyBy A. Giacomini, M. Nazem, E. Fathi Salmi
"Numerical simulation of collapse of tunnels in weak rocks is one of the challenging problems in rock mechanics. Collapse can impose technical and financial difficulties during the construction of und
Jan 1, 2015
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Deep hardrock mining — the futureBy D. M. Morrison
"The most important factor in Canadian mining is not the operating cost of current projects but the availability of capital for future projects. The future of mining at depth will be producing ore fro
Jan 1, 1996
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Petroleum Possibilities of Nova ScotiaBy Donald J. MacNeil
THE opinion, based upon geological knowledge, that certain areas within the Province of Nova Scotia might yield commercial quantities of petroleum, is not new. It dates back to at least 1864, when the
Jan 1, 1945
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Developing Zinc and Lead Deposits in Gaspe PeninsulaBy J. C. Beidelman
One of the oldest settled portions of Canada is that "strip of land" extending into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, known as the Gaspe peninsula, with the Bay of Chaleur on its southern boundary. This "stri
Jan 1, 1924
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The Stratigraphy and Oil and Gas Prospects of East-Central AlbertaBy G. S. Hume
THE Plains of east-central Alberta herein described embrace an area from Viking east to the Saskatchewan boundary and from North Saskatchewan river south to Coronation and Monitor (Figure 1). By far t
Jan 1, 1937
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Diamond-Drill Stoping at Waite-AmuletBy A. A. McCloskey
APPROXIMA TEL Y 95 percent of Waite-Amulet's Lower A orebody will be mined by diamond-drill stoping. This method of stoping was developed, and has been successfully applied, at the Noranda mine i
Jan 1, 1941
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Recent Developments in Gold Milling PracticeBy W. B. Timm
Introduction In preparing this paper on Recent Developments in Gold Milling Practice, the idea occurred to me that possibly the best way to deal with the subject would be to take you in thought on a
Jan 1, 1935
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Mining and Milling at Dome, Hollinger, and McIntyreBy James D. Hall
THE Dome ore-bodies are more or less isolated and are mined. by shrinkage stoping. An interwoven system of veins is mined at Hollinger '.1.nd requires close filling. Deep mining is the problem at
Jan 1, 1938
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Mineral Occurences in the Appalachian Region of Canada: Their Origin and Relation to StructureBy F. J. Alcock
The Appalachian region of Canada comprises the three maritime provinces; Nova Scotia; New Brunswick; and Prince Edward Island; and that; part of the Province of Quebec lying south and east of Logan's
Jan 1, 1954
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Mineral Deposits of the Southern Ukraine and of the Ural MountainsBy E. L. Bruce
EUROPEAN Russia is mainly a great plain, the average elevation of which is only 600 feet above sea level and the maximum elevation less than 1,200 feet (Figure 1). The main divide between the Arctic o
Jan 1, 1938
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The Geological SurveyBy G. A. Young
THE Geological Survey was created in 1842 to aid the development of Canada's mineral resources. Although the institution has been in existence for nearly 100 years and has accomplished an immense
Jan 1, 1940
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Mining Data in a Longwall Coal Mine: An Integration of Rock Mechanics & Data Mining to Predict Intersection StabilityBy P. R. La Pointe, J. Clark
"Studies have shown that the roof in coal mines is nearly twice as likely to fail at intersections as at entries due to enlarged roof spans, stress redistribution and other factors. However, the relat
Jan 1, 2015
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Some Notes on Present-Day Conditions in the Mining Industry of CanadaBy W. G. McBride
INTRODUCTION Preparation of this article, at the request of the Committee on papers, has been undertaken in the hope that it may stir up helpful discussion and constructive criticism. The Canadian mi
Jan 1, 1931
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Note on the Attitude and Conjectural Shape of the Submarine Portion of the Sydney CoalfieldBy Francis Wm. Gray
The preparation of a paper read before this Society in 1927 on Undersea Mining led to representations to the Deputy Minister of Mines at Ottawa, Dr. Chas. Camsell, and to the Director of the Geologica
Jan 1, 1934
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The Metallurgical Sulfuric Acid Plant Design, Operating & Materials Considerations 2007 UpdateBy L. J. Friedman
The recovery of sulfur dioxide from metallurgical gases for the production of sulfuric acid has been the primary means of reducing sulfur dioxide emissions from nonferrous smelters. Sulfuric acid has
Jan 1, 2007
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Hydrogeochemical Methods Application in the Canadian ShieldBy A. Y. Smith, R. J. Allan, E. H. W. Hornbrook, R. W. Boyle, W. Dyck
"HYDROGEOCHEMICAL METHODS in the Canadian Shield can be based on analyses of the following :(1) spring waters and their precipitates;(2) stream and river waters;(3) lake and muskeg waters;( 4) ground
Jan 1, 1971