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  • IOM3
    Smelting reduction of carbon-chromite composite pellets: part 1: reduction kinetics and mechanism; part 2: dissolution kinetics and mechanism

    By Y. L. Ding, N. A. Warner

    Cylindrical pellets made from graphite and chromite mixtures were reduced in high-carbon ferrochromium melts at 1 600-1 695 degrees C, under an atmosphere of almost pure CO. The reduction rate, as mea

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Carbon dioxide as an agent in extinguishing mine fires, with special reference to its application at the Senghenydd Colliery

    By Evans E. C.

    At first sight, the extinction of a mine fire by the action of some such gas as carbon dioxide would appear to be quite a simple and practicable operation. From a consideration of the theoretical aspe

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    Synthesis of grinding time-size reduction relationships

    By P. C. Kapur

    Several empirical and semi-empirical laws of comminution, which describe the relationships between the cumulative grinding energy input and the degree of size reduction of brittle solids, have been ra

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
    Copper-gold porphyry and skarn mineralization at Phu Lon, northern Thailand

    By W. S. Fyfe, G. V. Albino, Ekawat Sitthithaworn

    The mineralisation is associated with a composite diorite to quartz monzonite stock of Permian to Triassic age that intrudes Devonian carbonate strata. In the intrusive rocks it is associated with pot

    Jan 12, 1993

  • IOM3
    The Prevention of Spontaneous Combustion in the North Western Area

    By S. Vardy

    The paper notes that the extraction of 22% of the remaining workable reserves in the north western area involves a risk of spontaneous combustion higher than is normal in Britain. Mining systems have

    May 23, 1905

  • IOM3
    Exploration methods for nuclear waste repositories or mineral deposits - from source to sink, where's the front?

    By M. J. Russell, W. E. Stephens, D. B. Mohamad, A. B. MacKenzie

    Redox front processes in rocks are important in the context of both radioactive waste disposal and the development of orebodies. Results are presented from a study of the distribution of uranium and t

    Jan 12, 1992

  • IOM3
    Conveyor chain experince in Australia and South Africa (twin inboardside discharge installations)

    By P A. Collier

    The general view of the author is that all the good intentions of manufacturers can fail completely if the variations in circumstances in underground mining are not considered at all times. With a bel

    Jan 5, 1996

  • IOM3
    Ore mineralogy, textures and trace-element distributions at Raibl carbonate-hosted lead-zinc deposit, Tarvisio, Italy, with reference to treatment

    By L Casari

    A study of samples from three sectors of the mine, which was worked from Roman times to 1991, revealed different textures, mineral associations and distributions of trace elements in the sulphides. In

    Jun 18, 1905

  • IOM3
    The sinking and equipment of a circular shaft

    Paper presented at the Mining Institute of Scotland's annual general meeting held in Glasgow, 8th April 1916. Although there is nothing novel or difficult about the sinking described, circular shafts

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    The influence of incombustible substances on coal-dust explosions

    The paper, presented at the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers' general meeting held in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 8th April 1916, presents experimental work undertaken to observe

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    Sulphide-silicate reactions as a guide to Ni-Cu-Co mineralization in central Maine. U.S.A.

    By A. J. Naldrett

    "Synorogenic mafic intrusions are a common feature of the northern Appalachians. Two sulphide-bearing intrusions in central Maine that have been investigated revealed a number of important features th

    Jan 1, 1984

  • IOM3
    Mineralogical characterization of calcine, neutral-leach residue and weak acid-leach residue from Vieille-Montagne zinc plant, Balen, Belgium

    By T. T. Chen, J. E. Dutrizac, C. Canoo

    The calcine consists principally of ZnO and ZnFe2O4, which occur as banded and porous grains, together with lesser amounts of Zn2SiO4, Zn-Fe-Pb silicate, sphalerite, quartz, PbSO4 and Fe2O3. Al is pre

    Jan 4, 1993

  • IOM3
    Geochemical dispersion of gold associated with three gold prospects in Thailand - implications for exploration

    By Tawsaporn Nuchanong, Ian Nichol

    Investigations of the dispersion of gold in soils and stream sediments associated with three gold deposits in Thailand indicate the existence of different geochemical dispersion patterns in the three

    Jan 4, 1992

  • IOM3
    Leaching characteristics of heavy metals from three historical Pb-Zn mine tailings heaps in the United Kingdom

    By G. Merrington, B. J. Alloway

    Tailings from three historical mining areas in the UK were leached in columns under a simulated weathering programme which was chosen to represent periods of 1 and 2 years at 3 different ambient tempe

    Jan 8, 1993

  • IOM3
    Petrography and paragenesis of platinum-group minerals in Jinchuan ultramafic intrusion, northwest China

    By Li Shibo, C. Halls

    The compositions of olivine, pyroxene and chromite from the Proterozoic ultramafic complex are analagous to those of cumulate ultramafic rocks of tholeiitic origin, suggesting that the parent magma ma

    Jan 12, 1993

  • IOM3
    Aspects of nickel metallogeny of Southern Africa

    By E. C. I. Hammerbeck

    "Geological controls and constraints in space and time define the milieu of the nickel deposits of Southern Africa. Primary, magmatic deposits are of two types, e.g. synvolcanic or syntectonic deposit

    Jan 1, 1984

  • IOM3
    The Prevention of Spontaneous Combustion in Scottish South Area

    By W. H. McAllister

    The paper considers the geology and the coalfields that comprise the Scottish south area. It traces the history of known sources of spontaneous combustion and indicates the collieries concerned, with

    May 23, 1905

  • IOM3
    Metamorphically and hydrothermally mobilized Fe-Ni-Cu sulphides at Kambalda, Western Australia

    By C. M. Lesher, R. R. Keays

    "The komatnte-associated Fe-Ni-Cu sulphide mineralization at Kanihalda, Western Australia, is generally believed to be magmatic in origin, but a number of postmagmatic processes significantly modified

    Jan 1, 1984

  • IOM3
    Aspects of metallogenesis within the southern Caledonides of Great Britain and Ireland

    By C. J. V. Wheatley

    Recent studies of the mineralisation at Avoca in southeast Ireland, Parys Mountain in Anglesey, and Coniston in the Lake District result in the proposal of a new metallogenetic model for mineral depos

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
    Achieving profitability from mechanisation of Underground in India

    By Z Hu

    The technique of reclaiming disturbed land by use of a hydraulic dredge pump (HDP) (which is a set of hydraulic machines for earthwork), termed 'digging deep to fill shallow has been used in the recla

    Jan 4, 1996