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  • AIME
    Survival Through Mineral Strength

    By Elmer W. Pehrson

    The term "survival" in the title means the preservation of a society in which men are free from the political and economic restraints that characterize totalitarian systems, be they communist, sociali

    Jan 11, 1962

  • AIME
    Guide To Selecting Optimum Spacing For Levels And Raises

    By Koehler S. Stout

    At today's mineral prices, unproductive or low productive work in any underground mine must be kept at a minimum to insure a profit. Improper level and raise spacing can be one of the contributin

    Jan 11, 1962

  • AIME
    Management Controls In Mining - Modern Methods Need Wider Acceptance

    By Theodore Barry

    The task of developing controls in the mining and manufacturing industries to give them a tighter grip on operating costs has afforded this author an interesting vantage point for observing certain pr

    Jan 11, 1962

  • AIME
    Tennessee Copper Co. Now Uses An-Fo For 80% Of Its Blasting

    By Henry B. Estabrooks

    As was true with many mining companies, the management of Tennessee Copper Co. followed with interest the successful application of AN-FO as an explosive in coal stripping, construction, open-pit mini

    Jan 11, 1962

  • AIME
    Current Beneficiation Practices For Pebble Phosphate In Florida

    By W. A. LaVenue, W. M. Houston

    Pebble phosphate mines of Florida have been established from south of Hardee County to north of the Georgia state line, a distance of over 200 miles. Mining has been carried out on an ever-increasing

    Jan 11, 1962

  • AIME
    An Operator's Viewpoint Of The Standard Cost System

    By Arthur W. Ruff

    One of the major challenges to management in the mining industry today is the establishment and maintenance of positive and dynamic programs for cost control and cost reduction. To meet the challenge,

    Jan 11, 1962

  • AIME
    Unique Mining Operation Yields Rutile And Aplite

    By W. W. Coffeen, K. E. Doud

    A singular mineral extraction and processing operation is conducted by Metal & Thermit Corp. in Hanover County, Va. The mine presently produces aplite rock, rutile and ilmenite. The deposit lies in

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    Mining Cost Control - One Answer To Diminishing Profit Margins

    By A. F. Peterson, A. R. Eshbach

    Much has been written to explain decreasing profits in American industry. Foreign competition, the attitude of government, rising tax burdens and increased labor costs have been blamed in turn. Whatev

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    Distribution Of Zinc In Soils Overlying The Flat Gap Mine

    By Alan D. Hoagland

    The Flat Gap mine, are important zinc deposit of the Appalachian type, is located in the Copper Ridge Belt in the Valley of Tennessee approximately 30 miles northeast of the Mascot-Jefferson City zinc

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    Guide To Effective Mine Control Of Methane Layers

    By S. J. Leach

    The possible solution of some of the problems raised in H. L. Hartman's article "Determining Ventilation Requirements for Continuous Miners," which appeared in the March 1962 issue of MINING ENGI

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    Mode Of Mining At Kings Mountain

    By Ralph C. Flow

    In Cleveland County, North Carolina, 1 ½ miles south of Kings Mountain, Foote Mineral Co. operates an open pit for the production of spodumene, feldspar, mica and commercial stone. Spodumene concentr

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    Coal Handling At Paradise

    By Stanley Kesler

    The first of two initial 650-mw units of the Paradise Steam Station, located on the banks of the Green River in the south-central portion of the western Kentucky coal basin, is scheduled for operation

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    Selective Froth Flotation Of Ultrafine Minerals Or Slimes

    By James B. Duke, Ernest W. Greene

    An idea of what is meant by "Ultrafine Minerals Or Slimes" as used in the title can be had by an examination of Fig. I. Particle size distributions are presented for a crude kaolin clay, a coarse frac

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    American Zinc Co. Mining Methods In East Tennessee District

    By M. J. Langley

    Zinc ores were first discovered in Tennessee in 1856 at Jefferson City where a deposit became the Mossy Creek mine. From that time until 1913, small- scale attempts at prospecting and mining were made

    Jan 10, 1962

  • AIME
    Plastic Becomes Panacea For Uranium Reduction Co.

    By R. L. Curfman

    In May 1960, six months after conversion of one- half of the Uranium Reduction Co. mill from acid to alkaline leach, severe corrosion was encountered in the 112 stainless steel wash baskets in the res

    Jan 9, 1962

  • AIME
    California Asbestos Goes To Market

    By Paul C. Merritt

    Chrysotile asbestos producers in Quebec may soon experience a unique situation-i.e., strong competition from American ore sources for the short fiber market west of the Mississippi River. This com- pe

    Jan 9, 1962

  • AIME
    Velocity, Hole Depth Related To Blasting Results

    By Richard L. Ash, Thomas E. Pearse

    Most theories of blasting phenomena are based on the condition that explosive charges have a spherical shape. If a cylindrical charge is considered, the explosive is usually assumed to have an infinit

    Jan 9, 1962

  • AIME
    Coalinga-Newcomer To The Asbestos Industry

    By Robert C. Munro, Kenneth M. Reim

    NEW IDRIA INTRUSIVE For the most part this ultrabasic mass is a highly sheared serpentine, the exposed rock being made up of small serpentine chips and plates, the faces of which have been slickens

    Jan 9, 1962

  • AIME
    Photoelectric Control For Mine Car Loading Developed At Carlsbad

    By Charles E. Johnston

    By substituting photoelectric automatic car loading for mechanically induced hydraulic automatic loading and by protecting the process against operational failures, the engineering staff at Internatio

    Jan 9, 1962

  • AIME
    Role Of The Office Of Coal Research

    By Wayne A. McCurdy

    Seldom in history has any industry undergone such radical and rapid change as that experienced by coal. Since 1947, when bituminous coal production reached an all-time high of 631 million tons, the in

    Jan 9, 1962