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Continuous Excavators (Bucket Wheel And Chain Diggers)
By Reinhard H. Wöhlbier, George E. Aiken
8.4-1. Introduction. Surface excavating is done on a continuous basis with a variety of machines: 1) trenchers and ditchers, 2) conveyor loaders, and 3) bucket-chain and bucket-wheel excavators (BWE).
Jan 1, 1968
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Utilization Problems of Metallurgical Limestone and Dolomite
By Oliver Bowles
WHILE vast quantities of limestone and dolomite. are used in metallurgy, the estimated production in 1926 being 23,860,000 tons, there are many problems connected with their use which have not receive
Jan 1, 1928
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Evaluation and Prediction of Optimum Cleaning Results
By F. F. Peng, A. D. Walters, M. R. Geer, J. W. Leonard
INTRODUCTION Washability characteristics derived from float-and-sink analysis in Chapter 4 demonstrate that coal is intrinsically heterogeneous, and this heterogeneity is also evident in the proxi
Jan 1, 1979
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Illness in Industry-Its Cost and Prevention
By Thomas Darlington
THE obligation of an employer to the State requires certain things of him as matters of good citizenship: for instance, that his workmen shall have a living wage, that child labor shall not be employe
Jan 2, 1918
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Minerals Beneficiation - Collector Mobility and Bubble Contact
By M. D. Hassialis, C. G. Myer
THE nature of a collector-coated mineral surface has been the subject of some experimentation and much speculation. Various aspects of the problem have been isolated and studied; it is probable, howev
Jan 1, 1952
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Tests For Tunnel Support And Lining Requirements
By Walter H. Ortel, George B. Wallace
INTRODUCTION A greater understanding is required about the factors which control tunneling operations if we are to meet the expected demand for tunnels. Much of the needed information can best be
Jan 1, 1971
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Sampling and Estimating Lake Superior Iron Ores
By J. F. Wolff
EXPLORATION of Lake Superior iron ores is done principally by drilling. The soft iron ores are churn drilled and the harder ores are diamond drilled. In exploratory work in the harder formations, wher
Jan 9, 1922
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American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers
Since 1571, when the Institute was founded, many of the most important papers in the English language, on the various phases of mining and metallurgy, have appeared as Institute publications. As memb
Jan 1, 1933
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Tramming And Hoisting At Copper Queen Mine
By Gerald Sherman
(San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) THE ore deposits of the Warren district, in which the mines of the Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Co. are situated, have been described in a number of techn
Jan 9, 1915
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Surface Tension And Adsorption Phenomena In Flotation
By Arthur Taggart
FLOTATION of ores is a practical utilization of the energy that resides in the surfaces of solids and liquids. The best known manifestation of this energy is called surface tension; an equally importa
Jan 8, 1922
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V. Characters depending upon Electricity and Magnetism
By William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
436. Electrical Conductivity. - The subject of the relative conducting power of different minerals is one of minor interest.* In general most minerals, except those having a metallic luster among the
Jan 1, 1922
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Airborne Gravity Meter - Description And Preliminary Results
By John H. Ratcliffe, Hans T. Lundberg
In airborne gravity surveys effects of acceleration and irregular movements of the aircraft must be balanced out or overcome. The gradient of vertical gravity is recorded, therefore, by using two mass
Jan 8, 1959
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Hardness And Lattice Stress In Solid Solutions
By J. H. Frye, R. M. Treco, J. W. Caum
IT has been suggested that: "Insofar as the hardening due to a solute depends upon the increase of lattice parameter produced by it, it is reasonable to suppose that this hardening might be related to
Jan 1, 1943
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Current And Future Status Of Surface Mining
By Paul T. Allsman
1.1-1. Current Status. The history of surface mining is essentially that of mining coal, copper, and iron ores, and the nonmetallic minerals--clays, gypsum, phosphate rock, sand, gravel, and stone. Ta
Jan 1, 1968
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Characteristics of Coal and Its Associated Impurities
By M. R. Geer, J. D. Davis, H. F. Yancey
ALTHOUGH the mechanical cleaning of coal is carried out at plants on the surface, preparation is actually begun at the face in the mine. Here the character of the coal and the amount, character, and d
Jan 1, 1943
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Classification and Compensation of Government Federal Engineers
By AIME AIME
NO ADEQUATE salary scale, at the present time, can ignore the increase in the cost of commodities 'during the last few years or- afford to assume that this increase is merely temporary. A study
Jan 1, 1920
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Water Displacement in Oil and Gas Sands
By Roswell Johnson
ALL strata not yielding oil or gas in commercial quantities or a corresponding amount of water may be called dry in a wide sense. In petroleum geology,, however, we may exclude all sands of too low or
Jan 1, 1920
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A New Silicate of Lead and Zinc
By Van Der Muelen P. A.
SOME time ago, the writer received from W. 0. Borcherdt, Manager of the, works of the Bertha Mineral Co. at Austinville, Va., several specimens of a dense yellowish slag-like material, containing cavi
Jan 5, 1917
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Government Policies For Mineral Development And Trade
By Richard L. Gordon
Minerals long have been important commodities in international trade. As an inevitable result, the governments of the world have employed a wide variety of programs that affect the flow of trade. Roug
Jan 1, 1976
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Bulkheads and Drains for High Sandfill Stopes
By Richard A. Busch, Roy L. Soderberg
Large, high, open stopes resulting from vertical crater retreat (VCR) and similar methods are usually filled with sand tailings to support the stope walls and make it possible to mine the pillars. The
Jan 1, 1983