Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Bradley Stoughton Resigns Secretaryship
By Bradley Stoughton
AT THE meeting of the Board of Directors on May 20, the resignation of Bradley Stoughton as Secretary of the Institute was presented and regretfully accepted by the Board. The letter of resignation fo
Jan 1, 1921
-
Brakes for the Mineral Industry
By George Smith
IN discussing present-day business and industrial troubles we easily drop into the habit of clinical diagnosis. Talk of this kind, with its emphasis on suspicious symptoms and abnormal tendencies, mak
Jan 8, 1928
-
Branch Councils
BRANCH COUNCILS MINING BRANCH R E Byler, '53, Chairman (Minerals Beneficiation) - C M. Cooley, Acting Secretary A Lee Barrett, '54, (Coal) Carroll A Garner, '53, (Coal) E. H Crabt
Jan 1, 1952
-
Branch Raise System At The Ruth Mine, Nevada Consolidated Copper Co.
By Walter Larsh
The Ruth orebody, so far developed, is roughly oval in plan, major and minor axes about 1600 ft. (487 m.) and 1200 ft. (365 m.) respectively, average thickness about 120 ft. (36 m.), and with a genera
Jan 1, 1918
-
Brazil - Land of Great Potential Mineral Wealth - Small-Scale Operations and Lack of Transportation Hinder Development
By James S. Baker
LARGER than continental United States but with only about one third the population, Brazil is a land of enormous potential wealth, waiting to be developed. During a recent visit to that country I saw
Jan 1, 1945
-
Brazil's Geophysical Prospecting Program
By Mark C. Malamphy
AT present the Federal Government represents the only organization applying geophysical methods of prospecting in Brazil. The geophysical work of the National Department of Mineral Production, which w
Jan 1, 1936
-
Brazilian Mining: Relaxed Gov't Attitudes Pave The Way For Exploiting Critical Reserves
By Stanley J. LeFond
Brazil is one of the most outstanding examples of economic development of our time. Its amazing growth record is substantiated by a GNP which has increased at an average rate of 92% for the period 196
Jan 11, 1973
-
Brazilian Quartz-a Strategic Mineral
By Paul F. Kerr
QUARTZ of a certain kind, is one of our strategic minerals, and Brazil is probably the one important available source. Crystals of quartz of suitable size and perfection for piezoelectrical applicatio
Jan 1, 1942
-
Brazos Coal-Field, Texas*
By Charles A. Ashburner
VERY little is known of the economical value of the coal-betas of. the State of Texas. The first authentic statement in regard to their occurrence is that contained in the reports of the United States
Jan 1, 1881
-
Breadth and Fundamentals - The Prime Requisites for Training Geologists to Work in Industrial Minerals
By J. B. Patton
No academic program of reasonable duration can provide a geologist with all the skills that may be needed for applied work in industrial minerals. However, any curriculum that does not provide backgro
Jan 1, 1985
-
Breakage And Heat Treatment Of Rock-Drill Steel
By Benjamin Tillson
To MOST mine operators, it seems evident that there is a drill-steel problem, although under certain conditions the amount f drill-steel breakage does not appear serious. What is at fault? It may be o
Jan 5, 1921
-
Breaking And Crushing
By Homer W. Riley, C S. Jenkins
SMALL power-driven, toothed, cast-iron rolls were used first to break anthracite in 1844. Prior to that time, men with hammers, who stood on perforated cast-iron- plates, .broke the large lumps into c
Jan 1, 1943
-
Breaking And Crushing (Chapter 6)
By Homer W. Riley
ANTHRACITE SMALL power-driven, toothed, cast-iron rolls were used first to break anthracite in 1844. Prior to that time, men with hammers, who stood on perforated cast-iron plates, broke the large
Jan 1, 1950
-
Breaking and Crushing (Chapter 7)
By J. D. McClung
INTRODUCTION The ever increasing demand for coal sues that meet exacting specifications has made necessary the installation of thousands of dollars worth of crushing equipment by the coal industry
Jan 1, 1968
-
Breaking Bottlenecks at the Face With Continuous Haulage
By William D. Mayercheck
Introduction of continuous mining machines in the late 1940s created a new production bottleneck in room-and-pillar sections-the shuttle car. While continuous miners could cut and load coal at a nearl
Jan 7, 1979
-
Breaking Half a Million Tons in One Blast
By M. A. Roche
AST fall over half a million tons of ore and rock were broken in one blast at the open pit of the Hudson Bay Mining & Smelting Company's operation, at Flin Flon, Manitoba. The following particula
Jan 1, 1934
-
Breaking Half a Million Tons of Ore in One Blast with 58 Tons of Powder
By F. S. McNicholas, R. L. Healy
NOTEWORTHY because of the amount of explosives used, the tonnage broken, and the wide range involved both vertically and laterally, was a large underground blast fired last November at the Hidden Cree
Jan 1, 1935
-
Breccia Structures in the Ontario Mine, Park City District, Utah
By W. J. Garmoe
Distinct areas of mineralized and non-mineralized brecciated rock are found in the Ontario Unit of the United Park City Mines. These breccias contain an appreciable fraction of the present ore reserve
Jan 1, 1968
-
Bridgeport - October, 1894
Jan 1, 1895
-
Bridgeport Paper - A Uniform Method for the Assay of Copper Materials for Gold and Silver (see Discussion, p. 872)
By Albert R. Ledoux
In Great Britain all analytical chemists are styled assayers, but in the United states a slight distinction is made, assayers being considered those analytical chemists who have chiefly to do with the
Jan 1, 1895