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Trends In The Application Of Geophysics
By Walter E. Heinrichs
Since World War II exploration geophysics has derived its scope from the following factors: first, the usual post-war interest in exploration to rebuild war-depleted reserves; second, the impetus supp
Jan 7, 1959
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Differential Thermal Analysis For Ore Treatment Study
By William I. Watson
Problems encountered in beneficiating mineral raw materials become increasingly difficult as there is a shift to lower grade and more complex raw materials, and because of the economic need to strive
Jan 7, 1959
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The Gem Stocks And Adjacent Orebodies, Coeur D’Alene District, Idaho
By Garth M. Crosby
Seven mines with important production records in the Coeur d'Alene lie adjacent to the Gem stocks -the Frisco (Gem), Hercules, Interstate, Rex (Sixteen to One), Success (Granite), Sunset, and Tam
Jan 7, 1959
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Thorium And Uranium Resources In Monazite Placers Of The Western Piedmont, North And South Carolina
By William C. Overstreet, Paul K. Theobald, Jesse W. Whitlow
Monazite placers in a region of the Carolinas explored in 1951-1954 by the USGS are estimated to contain at least 53,000 short tons of thorium and 4600 short tons of uranium. None of these deposits is
Jan 7, 1959
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Advancing Through Caved Ground With Yieldable Arches
By James Quigley
As the outcrop mines in the West developed into underground operations, systems of ground sup- port were gradually evolved. In the early coal mines there was little need for support except near the di
Jan 7, 1959
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Discussion - Precision Survey For Tunnel Control - Mining Engineering, Page 977, September 1958, AIME Trans., Vol. 214 – Donald, Douglas D.
By C. J. Barber
This paper Donald describes how New Jersey Zinc Co. made surveys for a connection between the Ivanhoe and Van Mater shafts at Austinville, Va. Except to say that the two faces had to meet "accurately"
Jan 7, 1959
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Case History In Pillar Recovery
By John J. Reed
The mines of southeast Missouri's Lead Belt have been in operation since 1864, almost 100 years. During this period about 10 pct of the total ore available has been left in place as pillars, and
Jan 7, 1959
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Meteorological Influence On Radon Concentration In Drillholes
By Allan B. Tanner
The effects of radon in drillholes on gamma-ray logs have been described by L. S. Hilpert and C. M. Bunker1 Since these effects may cause drastic error in the evaluation of uranium deposits, it is use
Jan 7, 1959
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Laboratory Investigation - Flocculation To Improve Coal Slurry Filtration
By M. R. Geer, H. F. Yancey, P. S. Jacobsen
Two growing problems confront the preparation engineer-still further restrictions on stream pollution and a greater proportion of fine coal as more and more continuous miners come into use. The dewate
Jan 7, 1959
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Moss No. 3 Mine's New Coal Preparation Plant
The rich Tiller seam in southwest Virginia averages 10 to 15 ft in thickness. But because it is separated into two benches, mining engineers for years considered it neither physically nor economically
Jan 7, 1959
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Discussion - Scale-Up Relationships In Spodumene Flotation - Mining Engineering, Page 1182, November, 1958, AIME Trans., Vol. 214 – Horst, W. E.
By John Dasher
Getting spodumene to float quickly and cleanly can be a problem. The author has presented an excellent account of a valid and useful approach to the scale-up of such problem floats. This indicated adv
Jan 6, 1959
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Discussion - Lineament Tectonics And Some Ore Districts Of The Southwest - Mining Engineering, Page 1169, November 1958, AIME Trans., Vol. 214 - Mayo, E. B.
By David LeCount Evans
Not only E. B. Mayo but also W. C. Lacy, who apparently urged the preparation of this analysis, is to be commended. Regional thinking of this type is needed to assure future success in the never-endin
Jan 6, 1959
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New Techniques For Old Mines
By Paul L. Goddard, Alfred G. Hoyl, William R. Sirola
A good place to look for elephants is in elephant country, and old mining districts are certainly elephant country as far as minerals are concerned. In many areas probably more ore is still in the gro
Jan 6, 1959
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Drill Core Scanner Proved In Field
By W. W. Vaughn, R. H. Barnett, E. E. Wilson
Soon after the search for uranium ores on the Colorado Plateau began in earnest, thousands of feet of drill core ranging from 1 1/8 to 2 1/8 in. diam became available for study. Although significant
Jan 6, 1959
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Rock Breakage With Confined Concentrated Charges
By Wilbur I. Duvall, Thomas C. Atchison
Over the past ten years a series of investigations have been conducted to determine some of the physical processes involved in breaking rock with confined concentrated charges. Detailed discussions of
Jan 6, 1959
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X-Ray Mineral Analysis Techniques
By Ralph E. Wood
X-ray fluorescence analysis can be profitably applied in the mineral industry by improving evaluation and control analyses, while offering lower cost and greater speed than conventional methods. Chemi
Jan 6, 1959
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Effect Of Pulp Depth And Initial Pulp Density In Batch Thickening
By S. R. Mitchell, M. C. Fuerstenau, A. M. Gaudin
The two principal attributes of a thickener pulp are its settling rate and the ultimate pulp density of the thickened mud. Testing for evaluation of thickening attributes of a pulp has usually been do
Jan 6, 1959
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Extrusion-Agglomeration Of Iron Fines
By Ira A. Stark
Use of clay-working machinery in the metallurgical industry is by no means new. Extrusion- agglomeration as a basic operation in the non-ferrous field has a history of more than 50 years. This article
Jan 6, 1959
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The Copper Province Of The Southwest
By Harrison A. Schmitt
One of the great copper-producing areas of the world is comprised of five U. S. western states and northern Sonora, Mexico. The Southwest province of this area, covering southern Arizona, south- weste
Jan 6, 1959
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Shaft Sinking And Development Under Hot Water Conditions
By Donald L. Anderson
Presence of hot water brought on by volcanic action nearby has severely complicated mining in the Limon gold mine in Nicaragua. Routine pumping problems have been multiplied and ventilation is a major
Jan 6, 1959