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  • CIM
    The Design, Installation and Operation of a Tower Mounted Friction Hoist at Opemiska Copper Mines (Quebec) Limited

    Why A Friction Hoist? B EFORE discussing the equipment, it would be instructive to review the factors that influenced the management of Opemiska Cop-per Mines to purchase a friction hoist rather than

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Mechanical and Structural Changes During the Deformation of Copper by~ Fatigue

    By J. T. McGrath, R C. A Thruston

    The structural changes which take place in polycrystalline copper under the action of alternating cycles of torsion stress were studied, using the optical microscope and the X-ray dif-fraction camera,

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Developments tn Dust Collection Equipment

    By J. H. McKibbon

    THE metallurgical industry has purchased more than sixty per cent of the industrial gas cleaning equipment installed in Canada. This includes cyclonic collectors, scrubbers, cloth filters and Cottrell

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Beneficiation of Ores at the Flin Flon Concentrator

    By R. F. Coulter

    THE Flin Flon concentrating and metallurgical plants (Figure 1) of the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Co., Limited, lie adjacent to the town of Flin Flon, on the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border, 400 mile

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Terrestrial Heat Flow in the St. Lawrence Lowland of Quebec_

    By T H. Clark, R P. Doig, V. A. Saull, R B. Butler

    Terrestrial heat flow has been determined for four boreholes in the Montreal area. The mean value of the results (uncorrected for glacial effects) is 0.790 ± 0.053 x 10-6 cal/ cm2/sec (95 per cent con

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    The Canadian Mineral Industry 1900 to 1975

    By Ralph D. Parker

    THE subject matter of this paper will be primarily restricted to the metallic mineral industry, which last year was responsible for almost 60 per •Cent of the total value of Canada's mineral productio

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Canadian Oil Review -Progress and Problems

    By W. D. C. MacKenzie

    IT IS almost exactly fifteen years since the discovery of the Leduc oil field and, as this luncheon is part of the Thirteenth Annual Technical Meeting of the Institute's Petroleum and Natural Gas Divi

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Marketing and Utilization of Copper tn Canada

    By J. S. Vanderploeg

    I WILL begin this presentation by citing the annual per capita use of copper in Canada. This is best calculated by taking refinery domestic sales, plus imports of the products of foreign fabricating m

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Concrete Aggregates for British Columbia Construction Projects

    By P. J. Routledge

    THE purpose of this paper is to discuss the practical aspects of locating gravel deposits and of establishing efficient, portable concrete aggregate beneficiation plants for use on construction projec

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    The Monteagle Nepheline Corundum Mica Deposit Hastings County, Ontario

    By H. L. Noblitt, Pauline Moyd, Louis Moyd

    The deposit, which forms a ridge -adjacent to the York river, in Mont-eagle township, is held by Monteagle Minerals Limited, of Toronto. The ore is in a Precambrian gneiss which is composed of nepheli

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    The Accident Prevention Program at Consolidated Discovery Yellowknife Mines Limited

    By Ralf M. Kleine

    THE property of Consolidated 1 Discovery Yellowknife Mines Limited, (Figure I) is situated in the Northwest Territories, approximately 50 air miles north of the town of Yellowknife. The mine is reache

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Criteria of Ductility in Uniaxial Tension

    By H. H. Bleakney

    The merit of reduction-in-area as a criterion of quality in metals is shown to lie in its influence on breaking stress, but the virtue of elongation is not easy to find. In order to assess the value o

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Retimbering No. 2 Shaft at Sigma Mines (Quebec) Limited

    By G. E. Peacock

    SIGMA MINES is situated in the township of Bourlamaque, Abitibi County, Quebec. It is a gold producer, and presently treats an average of 1,200 tons of ore per day, at a grade of approximately 0.18 oz

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    A Discussion of Deep Drilling In the Blind River Area

    By D. S. Robertson

    More than 700,000 feet of diamond drilling was completed in the Blind River area between 1953 and 1958. Much of this drilling was at depths which are still not usual in North America. However, as the

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Financial Aspects of Mine Operation

    By A. H. C. A. Zimmerman

    WE have just heard what must be regarded as a thoughtful, constructive and somewhat painful analysis of the financial function of our industry. While thinking about this, it is interesting to reflect

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Geology of the Asbestos Belt in Southeastern Quebec

    By P. H. Riordon

    ONE OF the major sources of the world's supply of asbestos lies in a belt of ultrabasic rocks stretching through the Eastern Townships of Quebec where chrysotile asbestos has been mined continuously s

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Metallurgical Dust Collection in the Open Hearth and the Sinter Plant

    By A. C. Elliott, A. J. Lafreniere

    THE Hamilton Works of The Steel Company of Canada is a fully integrated steel plant with an annual capacity of three million tons. Located on the south shore of -Hamilton bay, it is in the centre of H

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Induced Polarization and Its Role in Mineral Exploration

    By H. O. Seigel

    Induced Polarization includes many types of dipolar charge distributions set up by the passage of current through consolidated or unconsolidated rocks. Among its causes are concentration polarization

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Some Aspects of Operating Under High Pressure

    By E. W. Lucht

    THE term "high pressure", as used in industry today, is applied rather loosely. Generally, it refers to pressures that are higher than those encountered in most industrial processes although no defini

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    On the Occurrence and Intensity of the Work-Softening of Steels

    By P. Chollet, A Constant

    THE RESULTS of a previous investigation ( 1) on the work-softening of some heat-treated steels have led to the conclusion that the occurrence and intensity of the phenomenon is possibly governed by th

    Jan 1, 1962