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  • NIOSH
    The National Economy, Raw Nonfuel Minerals, And Processed Mineral Materials - National Economic Statistics

    By Edward E. Johnson

    The U.S. economy made significant progress in 1984. The current-dollar gross national product (GNP), the market value of the Nation's output of goods and services, increased almost 11 percent ove

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    The Navy's Salvage Program

    By F. Lowell Lawrance

    JOHN SMITH, citizen of the U.S.A., has become so accustomed to reading that Congress has appropriated billions of dollars to pay war costs. that he no longer is impressed by relatively small figures,

    Jan 1, 1944

  • SME
    The Need For Innovation In Arid Land Reclamation

    By S. Grogan

    Next year marks the tenth anniversary of the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (SMCRA). As the U.S. coal industry scrambles to cope with serious economic difficulties, it is appropriate to ex

    Jan 1, 1986

  • TMS
    The Need to Recycle Zinc: A Consideration of Public Perception, Politics and Competitiveness

    By D. R. Parker

    "This paper canvasses emerging trends in public policy and law, which may influence the zinc industry's interest in recycling. There are forces at work beyond direct economic benefits that will drive

    Jan 1, 2000

  • AIME
    The New "Crime" of Silver: Who?s Guilty? ? Producers Hold They Should Receive the Monetary Price, $1.29; Consumers Argue for Free Open Market as an Industrial Metal ? The Producers? Side

    By Pat McCarran

    WHEN this Government was founded, the framers of the Constitution wrote into that instrument a provision that Congress should "coin money and fix the value thereof;" and the Constitution prohibits mak

    Jan 1, 1947

  • SME
    The new mineral sands plant of the 3rd Millennium…How difficult-to-treat feedstocks can get a new lease on life

    By J. M. Elder, W. S. Kow

    Challenges to new heavy mineral deposit developments are presented. These include land use issues, particle fineness, declining grades, and particle coating, amongst others. Industry responses to thes

    Jan 1, 2005

  • AIME
    The One Hundred and Twenty-third Meeting of the Institute

    By AIME AIME

    THE 123d meeting of the Institute was held in New York Feb. 14 to 17, 1921. The total registration was 1199, as compared with 1138 at the New York meeting in 1920. The weather was a strange and welco

    Jan 1, 1921

  • CIM
    The Ore Deposits of Nickel Plate Mountain, Hedley, B.C.

    By Paul Billingsley

    NICKEL Plate mountain coincides closely with that portion of the Hedley mining district which is of economic interest. From it has come almost the entire past production, and the active mines of the p

    Jan 1, 1941

  • CIM
    The Origins of Pressure Hydrometallurgy

    By F. Habashi

    The pioneer work on pressure hydrometallurgy was conducted in Russia at the end of the nineteenth, and the beginning of the twentieth centuries, by Karl Josef Bayer (1847-1904) and Vladimir Nikolyevit

    Jan 1, 2004

  • CIM
    The origins of zinc and brass

    By J. E. Dutrizac, J. B. O'Reilly

    "Zinc is a relatively abundant element which occurs as both high-grade sulphide ores {sphalerite ZnS) and oxide ores which the ancients collectively termed ""calamine"" (smithsonite ZnC03 and/ or hemi

    Jan 1, 1999

  • SME
    The Outlook For Mica

    By S. A. Montague

    In spite of the many new insulating materials, both synthetic and manufactured, that have been put on the market since the end of World War II, and notwithstanding the many millions of dollars applied

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    The Outlook for Silver

    By Robert Linton

    THE PURCHASE of silver by the United States Government under the provisions of the Pittman Act is practically completed. Producers of silver in this country will now have to market their silver in com

    Jan 6, 1923

  • CIM
    The Oxidation of Sulphide Minerals in the Sullivan Mine

    By B. H. Good

    This paper describes the research that has been conducted -in an effort to understand the nature and causes of sulphide fires -in the Sullivan Mine. Results of the investigation have led to several th

    Jan 1, 1977

  • SAIMM
    The Performance Of Brunswick Mine?s Rockburst Support System During A Severe Seismic Episode

    By B. Simser

    At Brunswick Mine, an increase in the number of seismically-related falls of ground and in particular rockbursts occurred during 1999. This was due to the ever-increasing stress levels in the remaini

    Jan 1, 2002

  • AUSIMM
    The Petrology and Mineralogy of the Whipstick Molybdenite-Bismuthinite Mines, Pambula District, N.S.W.

    The Bega granite at Whipstick, N.S.W., consists of a granite metasomatically altered to leucogranites and a spessartite-granite. The ore occurs in pipes controlled by jointing and shows evidence of po

    Jan 1, 1968

  • AIME
    The Physical Features And Mining Industry Of Peru.

    By George I. Adams

    PHYSICAL AND CLIMATIC DIVISIONS. PERU is divided into three regions-the coast, the sierra, or high mountainous region, and the a montana," or forest region of the Amazon basin. The Coast.-The coast

    Jan 7, 1908

  • SME
    The Plewes Method: a Word of Caution - Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration (2021)

    By LUIS ALBERTO TORRES-CRUZ

    The assessment of liquefaction vulnerability is crucial to understanding the potential consequences of a tailings dam failure. The “Plewes method” is a relatively well-known and simple screening metho

    Jan 28, 2021

  • AUSIMM
    The Porgera Gold Deposit Structure, Alteration and Mineralisation

    By T Leach, B Fulton, R Stewart

    Gold mineralisation at Porgera is inferred to have been derived from a deep differentiated magmatic source which is capped by a series of (now tilted) inward dipping sills and stocks, which comprise t

    Jan 1, 1995

  • CIM
    The Possibilities and Prospects for the Utilization of Canadian-Produced Copper in Home Manufacturing Industries

    By A. H. A. Robinson

    Until quite recently-practically up to the present time-all but an insignificant amount of the copper produced in Canada was shipped abroad in the form of ore, matte, blister, etc., there to undergo t

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AUSIMM
    The Practicalities of Monte Carlo Type Risk Analysis in Mining Projects

    The profitability of individual ore blocks can be classed as clearly profitable, clearly not profitable, and those in between which are by nature quite sensitive to their major cost and revenue driver

    Jan 1, 2002