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  • SME
    Borehole Hoisting For Shaft Sinking And Development At Brunswick Mining And Smelting Corporation Limited, Bathurst, New Brunswick

    By W. R. Dengler, R. S. Brown

    In 1974, Brunswick Mining and Smelting Corporation Limited started a 48 million dollar expansion programme at their property in Bathurst, New Brunswick. A portion of the expansion plans includes a 26

    Jan 1, 1976

  • ISEE
    Borehole Inspection with the HRS-1 Video System

    By Tom Palangio, Ralph M. Olmstead

    Video inspection of boreholes with cameras developed specifically for the mining industry is now possible. These designs are reliable, cost effective, and have the flexibility to be used in other appl

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SME
    Borehole Mining - Remote Advantages

    By G. Abramov

    The 20th Century saw the modern mining industry enriched by one outstanding method of extracting of mineral resources called Borehole Mining (BHM). Mean while, despite its successful track record in w

    Jan 1, 2001

  • IMMS
    Borehole Mining Of Manganese At Subzero Temperatures

    By Gregory Abramov

    Borehole Mining (BHM), a remotely-operated waterjet mining method (Figure 1), has recently achieved two major milestones. It was, for the first time, applied to the extraction of manganese ore and at

    Jan 1, 2011

  • SME
    Borehole Mining: Getting More Versatile

    By Marcus A. Wiley, Gregory Abramov

    Borehole mining (BHM) is a remotely operated method of extracting rock material through boreholes by high-pressure water jets. Figure 1 illustrates a BHM tool and fluids circulation. The tool consist

    Jan 1, 2004

  • AUSIMM
    Borehole Ropeways at No 2 Ore Shaft, Mount Isa Mines Limited

    The No. 2 Ore-shaft, at Mount Isa Mines Limited, involving the use of boreholes as ropeways for the upper portion thereof, constitutes, we believe, a unique feature in hoisting installations. The bore

    Jan 1, 1939

  • CIM
    Borehole seismic survey for mineral exploration: Case histories from Norman West and Halfmile Lake

    By G. Bellefleur, K. Stevens, E. Adam, D. Synder, G. Perron, C. Müller

    The Downhole Seismic Imaging consortium was initiated by the Geological Survey of Canada and three Canadian mining companies to assess the usefulness of borehole seismic techniques for the exploration

    Jan 1, 2004

  • AUSIMM
    Boring a Slime Dam

    By Met B

    IN the followmg paper an account is given of work performed by the author for the purpose of sampling a slime dam on the leases of the North Mount Farrell Co. N.L., at Tullah, Tasmania, during the sum

    Jan 1, 1928

  • SME
    Boring At High Thrust And Its Potential In The Hard-Rock Mining Industry In South Africa

    By J. W. Wilson, P. C. Graham

    SUMMARY The Witwatersrand quartzites in which South African gold mining operations are moat exclusively conducted, are notoriously difficult and costly to drill. Despite this situation, however, wi

    Jan 1, 1974

  • AUSIMM
    Boring at the State Coal Mine, Wonthaggi, Vic

    The seams of black coal occurring in Victoria are so disturbed by faulting, wash-outs, thinning, etc., that it is necessary, for the prevention of costly errors in development, that close boring be un

    Jan 1, 1936

  • SME
    Boring Large Hole Mine Openings

    By Erwin A. Morlan

    Present methods of boring large hole mine openings are briefly reviewed. Factors that influence the design and choice of down-the-hole equipment for rotary drilling large holes are discussed. With for

    Jan 1, 1961

  • SME
    Boring Through a Rock-Soil Interface in Singapore

    By Nicola Della Valle

    The Singapore Land Transport Authority (LTA) is currently expanding capacity by extending their Metro system from South of the city to the North East end of the island. The scope of Contract 704 in

    Jan 1, 2001

  • AIME
    Boron and Borates

    By Robert B. Kistler, Ward C. Smith

    The borate industry is one of the few sectors of the mining and mineral-processing industry which the United States still dominates. Since about 1927, the United States has supplied over half of the w

    Jan 1, 1975

  • SME
    Boron: A Review of 1995 Activities

    By J. C. Norman

    The United States was the world’s largest producer and consumer of boron compounds during 1995. According to estimates from the US Geological Survey(USGS), boron mineral concentrate and chemical prod

    Jan 1, 1996

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - A Suggested Cure for Blast-Furnace Chills

    By Henry M. Howe

    The object of the present paper is to suggest injecting into the hearths of iron blast furnaces, whose temperature has become unduly lowered, some form of fuel whose calorific intensity, under the pec

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Mining and Storing Ice

    By William P. Blake

    We are so familiar with water in its liquid and its solid form, that we seldom think of it as a mineral, and still less as a mineral product of any considerable industrial importance, though in the fo

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Notes on the Topography and Geology of Western North Carolina-The Hiawassee Valley

    By Henry E. Colton

    NeaR the town of Christiansburg, Va., occurs a singular feature in topographical as well as geological structure, which may be said to have an important bearing on a large area to the southwest. The g

    Jan 1, 1888

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - Remarks on the Magnetites of Clifton, in St. Lawrence County, New York

    By B. Silliman

    THESE ores occur in the Laurentian rocks in the town of Clifton, St. Lawrence County, New York. The Clifton Mining Company have opened these magnetites upon their estate of 23,000 acres, on the wat

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Management of Structural Steel

    By Albert F. Hill

    The manufacture of structural shapes in steel of uniform quality, which shall command the full confidence of the engineer, is a problem in practical metallurgy which is beginning to attract much atten

    Jan 1, 1883

  • AIME
    Boston Paper - The Midlothian Colliery, Virginia (Supplementary Paper)

    By Oswald J. Heinrich

    THE origin of spontaneous combustion in collieries is, of course, chiefly due to bad system in laying out the pits, unclean workings, insufficient ventilation, and neglect in damming off works after t