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Letters To The Editor - Not Self-Sufficient, But Largest
One item of general interest in MINING ENGINEERING Trends, May 1952 gives the wrong impression of the scale of the ilmenite operations in North Carolina It also implies there are known deposits of rut
Jan 1, 1952
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Discussion - Of Mr. Guess’ Paper on the Commercial Wet Led-Assay (see p. 359)
Mr. Joseph P. GAZZAM,Germiston, Transvaal, So. Africa (communication to the Secretary*) :—About fourteen years ago, in southeastern Missouri,I used a method for the wet determination of lead which clo
Jan 1, 1905
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Annual Review – Mineral Industry Health and Safety, 1955
By S. H. Ash
With statistics still incomplete, it appears that the safety record of the mineral industry for 1955 will do well to hold its own in comparison with 1954. On the one hand, metal mining shows an improv
Feb 1, 1956
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Pillar Blasting at the Pine Creek Mine
By L. A. Wright
Union Carbide Corp.'s Pine Creek mine in California is the largest known tungsten deposit in the West, and the producer of well over five million tons or ore to date. Located 21 miles northwest o
Jan 5, 1964
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Toronto Paper - Quantitative Field-Test for Magnesia in Cement-Rock and Limestone
By Charles Catlett
The rapid development of the Portland-cement industry implies that the country is being very carefully searched for material suitable for its manufacture. Such material can be found at a great many pl
Jan 1, 1908
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Progress of the Silver-Lead Metallurgy of the West, During 1874
By A. Eiders
THE year 1874 marks a decided advance in the metallurgy of the West, in two directions. On the one hand, the technical management has been very materially improved, and on the other, the production ha
Jan 1, 1875
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NEW Haven Paper - Progress of the Silver-Lead Metallurgy of the West during 1874
By A. Eilers
The year 1874 marks a decided advance in the metallurgy of the West, in two directions. On the one hand, the technical management has been very materially improved, and on the other, the production ha
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Economics of Deep Ocean Resources – A Question of Manganese or No-Manganese
By C. Richard Tinsley
Mineral economists debate whether to call the deep-ocean nodules "manganese nodules," "nickel nodules," "polymetallic nodules," or even "ferro-manganese nodules." It is nickel and copper that are gene
Jan 4, 1975
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Researchers Find Key To The Mechanism of Coal Flotation And Its Role In Fine-Coal Processing Systems
By R. P. Aikman, F. G. Miller, J. M. Podgursky
In response to the growing demand for low-sulfur coking coal for iron-making, the coal industry is continually striving to perfect methods for cleaning coal to acceptable ash and sulfur levels while m
Jan 7, 1967
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Application Of CPM Procedures In Mine Ventilation
By Jan M. Mutmansky, Y. J. Wang
Mine ventilation analysis is an engineering discipline that can be considered a branch of the body of science known as network analysis. Likewise, the group of engineering procedures known as the crit
Jan 1, 1982
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Spokane Paper - The Conservation of Coal in the United States
By Edward W. Parker
If one is to place any credence at all in the reports published in the daily press, the subject of conservation has been a very lively topic of conversation during the past 60 days, and it does not ap
Jan 1, 1910
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A Continuous Mine Roof Monitor
By Atmesh K. Sinha
In spite of the artificial supports which are provided to reinforce the mine roof and prevent failures, roof falls continue to occur very frequently in the mines due to the very unpredictable geologic
Jan 1, 1983
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Reliability Of Calculation Of Mineral Process Efficiencies And Rate Parameters From Balanced Data
By Daniel Houdouin
Data is frequently collected in mineral processing plants in order to evaluate operating performance or to model process units. Metal concentrations, circulating loads, products flow rates, classifier
Jan 1, 1984
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Continuous Countercurrent Decantation Calculations
By T. B. Counselman, T. B.
Continuous countercurrent decantation calculations have always been a headache to the cyanide man (and the chemical engineer) because of the simultaneous equations involved. These are tedious to solve
Jan 1, 1950
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D. K. Crampton, Chairman, Institute of Metals Division, A.I.M.E..
By AIME AIME
DONALD K. CRAMPTON, present Chairman of the Institute of Metals Division, A.I.M..E., is well known by nonferrous metallurgists in all countries for his research work on the fabrication and properties
Jan 1, 1941
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Dewatering of Ambrosia Lake Mines (MINING ENGINEERING)
By H. C. Juvkam-Wold
The aquifer depressurization system uses a number of wells surrounding a mine shaft to reduce the aquifer pressure in the vicinity of the shaft. The effect of various parameters such as number of well
Jan 1, 1983
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San Francisco Meeting Plans
By AIME AIME
THE revised program for the San Francisco meeting, with assignment of the various papers to the several sessions is now available and is printed below : MONDAY, OCT. 7 . General Meeting, 11-12 A.M
Jan 1, 1929
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Recent Modifications Of The Hall-Row Wedging Technique In Diamond Drilling
By Burton H. Boyum
GREATER depth of exploration drill holes and increasing cost of drilling have been principal factors in reviving interest on the Marquette Iron Range in controlled directional drill-hole deflection. T
Jan 1, 1947
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Mineralogy And Geology Of Texaco's Hobson Uranium Deposit, Karnes County, Texas
By Christie A. Callender, Harry M. Dahl
The Hobson uranium deposit is located in Karnes County, Texas, along the prominent south Texas uranium trend. The uranium mineralization occurs in the Deweesville Sandstone of the Whitsett Formation o
Jan 1, 1985
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Copper Precipitation Methods At Weed Heights
By Howard W. Jacky
At Weed Heights, Nev., precipitation plays a major role in the plant operation. Almost two-thirds of the present copper production is leach-precipitation plant copper. The entire plant complex proce
Jan 6, 1967