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  • AIME
    Mount Isa Pilots New Methods, Pushes Expansion

    Six hundred miles inland from Australia's east coast Port of Townsville in Queensland's sea of rock and spinifex lies Mount Isa. The town, as in most mining towns, is dominated by its mi

    Jan 10, 1964

  • AIME
    Broken Hill – A Living Legend

    Conservatively, there are a half million square miles in Australia just like it, this spot near the western border of New South Wales. Space and distance are the elements. Mulga tree and salt bush, si

    Jan 10, 1964

  • AIME
    Peabody Boosts Queensland Coal

    Balancing the prodigious iron ore deposits of Western Australia are the equally vast coal resources of the Bowen series of eastern Queensland. The Bowen series is a Permian basin stretching 500 miles

    Jan 10, 1964

  • AIME
    Dredging Coal for Victoria Power

    Beyond the industrial suburbs of Melbourne to the southeast are brown coal deposits just under the fertile soil of the Latrobe Valley. These deposits rank as one of the wonders of the world. The manne

    Jan 10, 1964

  • AIME
    Australian Rules

    Melbourne, capital of sedate Victoria, is oddly enough the home of a game known as "Australian Rules." Euphemistically described by devotees of the game as a cross between Rugby and Soccer, it appears

    Jan 10, 1964

  • AIME
    Port Pirie Leads Ways in Lead Smelting

    Spencer Gulf takes off from the Great Australian Bight cutting a 200 mile deep wedge of water into the South Australia coastline. A pale winter sun shines yellowly on the choppy surface of this body o

    Jan 10, 1964

  • AIME
    Technical Design of Autogenous Mills

    By Robert C. Meaders, Arthur R. MacPherson

    Many attempts have been made to eliminate most of the crushing plant and all the grinding plant in the process of ore beneficiation by substituting a combined crushing and grinding unit which could ta

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Ira B. Joralemon – An Interview by Henry Carlisle

    1910, hundreds of thousands of dollars of work and equipment in a 1500-foot shaft, crosscuts and pumping had found only copper-lean pyrite in two cross- cuts, and nothing in a third. Going aimlessly a

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Mineral Obsolescence and Substitution

    By Charles W. Merrill

    Obsolescence in the mineral world is virtually nonexistent if the term is taken to mean that a mineral commodity, once established in commerce and industry, subsequently has fallen into disuse. We are

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Maine Reenters Mining Picture

    At a special inaugural ceremony in Blue Hill, Maine on August 3rd, Governor John H. Reed detonated the first blast to signify the beginning of development work on a new copper-zinc mining venture that

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    The 4 W’s of Fuel Cells – Who-What-Where-When

    By Ernst M. Cohn

    The demonstrations of the "Silent Sentry" by Union Carbide Corp. in 1957 and of a special tractor-plow by Allis-Chalmers in 1959 ushered in the technology era of fuel cells. The idea for direct conver

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Deepest 72-in Diameter Rotary Drilled Shaft Sunk for AEC by Loffland Bros.

    One of the most unusual assignments in the his¬tory of Loffland Bros. Co. is now in progress with the drilling of a 72-in. diam. shaft in Nevada for the United States Atomic Energy Commission. Project

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Economic Appraisal of Geothermal Power

    By Alvin Kaufman

    The industrial revolution of the early 1800's and the subsequent remarkable progress in raising American living standards are based not only on a constantly improving technology but on an ever in

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Geothermal Heat Shows Possible Use in the Fiji Islands

    By J. N. Munro

    At the present stage of geothermal technology and the still limited applications of geothermal energy, most of us consider any use of "things geothermal" to be something out of the ordinary. If in suc

    Jan 9, 1964

  • AIME
    Kaiser’s Eagle Mountain Pelletizing Plant

    By George S. Lockwood

    Plans are moving ahead toward the July 1965 start-up date for Kaiser Steel Corp.’s new pelletizing plant at its Eagle Mountain, Calif., iron mine. Capacity will be 2 million long tons of pellets conta

    Jan 8, 1964

  • AIME
    Analog Computers Find Application in Control of Flotation Circuits

    By T. M. Morris, R. M. Edwards

    Digital and analog computers are being used at an accelerated rate for the control of processes. A digital computer can store information concerning a process and when it is fed certain information co

    Jan 8, 1964

  • AIME
    New Rutile Mine in Sierra Leone Announced

    W ill the location of the world's largest reserve of rutile, a titanium oxide mineral, in Sierra Leone, Africa, put an end to the worldwide shortage of this important mineral? According to offici

    Jan 8, 1964

  • AIME
    Stockpile Designs For Unit Train Loadings

    By Charles E. Packard

    Many coal producers have been faced recently with the problem of arranging their production facilities to accommodate recent trends in the transportation of their product. Each operator is normally fa

    Jan 8, 1964

  • AIME
    Canadian Production of Minerals and Metals

    By R. B. Toombs

    The national and international importance of Canada's minerals and metals producing industry is reported. The growth of the Canadian industry is traced from 1945, through the period of rapid deve

    Jan 8, 1964

  • AIME
    Investment Capital and Mineral Development

    By L. C. Raymond

    Why, in an age when natural resources are available on a scale heretofore unknown, and when there is an unprecedented need for them to be developed, have would leaders been unable to find solutions wh

    Jan 8, 1964