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El Salvador
Andes Copper has an old camp and a new camp, both isolated until recent road improvements. The old camp is at Potrerillos and the new one at El Salvador, 25 road ,miles away. The company was incorpora
Jan 11, 1969
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Copper In The Andes
By John V. Beall, William F. Haddon
A long the mighty Andean Cordillera, there is splendor beyond imagination-in the natural beauty of the mountains and in daring engineering and lavish investment in the mines. This is the story of the
Jan 11, 1969
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Cobriza
Cobriza can only be described as the Machu Picchu of the mining business. This relatively new mine of the Cerro de Pasco Corp. in Peru, subsidiary of The Cerro Corp., was put on stream in December 196
Jan 11, 1969
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Rio Blanco
Hunkered up against the spine of the Andes in a tight valley where natural refuge from avalanche hardly exists is the daring Rio Blanco project of Cerro Corp. The deposit here was found in 1904, but n
Jan 11, 1969
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Chuqui
A mine that staggers the imagination is Chuquicamata, the granddaddy of them all. In 1968 production exceeded 300,000 tons of copper. Production began in 1915 and mining proceeded solely on oxide ores
Jan 11, 1969
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El Teniente
E1 Teniente made blockcaving look easy. Ore rolling out the Teniente 5 level has the appearance of nicely screened riprap ready for road dressing. Actually it has been mostly size-reduced by nature ab
Jan 11, 1969
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Crushing And Grinding Practice In Sweden
By B. Fagerberg, P. H. Fahlstrom
Crushing and grinding practice in Sweden follows closely the international pattern. Certain special circumstances, however, have had an influence on its development. Most mines are worked underground.
Jan 10, 1969
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A New Dimension In Underground Excavation
While great strides have been made in the machinery for mining rock on the surface of the land, comparable advances have not been made with underground equipment. In fact, excavation of underground op
Jan 10, 1969
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How To Effect A Cost Reduction In Diamond Drilling
By K. C. Strebig, C. W. Schultz, A. A. Selim
For some time researchers have attempted to in- crease drilling efficiency (and therefore reduce costs) by adding certain chemical agents to the circulating medium. The effect of some organic additive
Jan 10, 1969
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Transportation Revolution Highlights SME Fall Meeting In Salt Lake City, Utah
Inflation, tight money and keen competition spur companies to consider advanced material handling systems capable of reducing cost per ton of moving ore, waste or men and supplies. Since transportatio
Jan 10, 1969
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Unit Trains, Slurry Pipelines And Supercargo Carriers To Save Money On Long Distance Coal Shipments
By Paul Averitt
In spite of recent trends in the United States toward construction of steam generating plants near mine mouths, and toward use of high-voltage direct current for long-distance transmission of electric
Jan 10, 1969
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Financial Analysis: A Tool For The Progressive Mining Man
By Daniel T. O’Brian
Exploration targets and results in the mining industry are commonly summarized in terms of tonnage and grade. Business appraisals require, as additional information, the expected profit or loss implie
Jan 10, 1969
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Reports On Technological Research - Reduction-Induration Applied To Iron Ore Pellets
By R. B. Schluter, M. M. Fine
The Bureau of Mines' Twin Cities Metallurgy Research Center has of late concerned itself with reduction-induration of iron ore. One development provided a flowsheet for the agglomeration of green
Jan 10, 1969
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Mining: A Business For Professionals Only
By Fredrick C. Kruger
Risk capital for mining ventures becomes harder to get each year as the costs for exploration, construction and money continue to skyrocket in today's inflationary economy. Because of this and be
Jan 9, 1969
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Reports On Technological Research - Bureau Contribution To Slope Angle Research At The Kimbley Pit, Ely, Nevada
By Robert H. Merrill
During the period from 1960 through 1966, the U.S. Bureau of Mines and Kennecott Copper Corp. performed an experiment to determine the changes in stress, strain, and displacement created by changes in
Jan 9, 1969
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Two New Ways To Slash Transportation Costs
Ask any mineral industry executive what he considers one of the most expensive aspects of getting a product to the ultimate consumer and invariably the answer will be transportation. Some company offi
Jan 9, 1969
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Rock Mechanics Can Help Underground Blasting Practice
By David E. Fogelson, James J. Olson
Rock mechanics as a guide to a safe underground operation is gaining importance as more is under- stood of rock behavior under stress and of the competency of rock after blasting. The U. S. Bureau of
Jan 9, 1969
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A New Invention Helps Win More Value From Electrolytic Plant Feed
By Behram H. Wadia, Robert S. Lehto
A new metallurgical treatment for capturing as much of the values as possible from zinc refinery feed has been devised by personnel in Cerro de Pasco's Peruvian operation at La Oroya. Results fro
Jan 9, 1969
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Taiwan - A Growth Investment Area Mineral Potential Little Explored
By John V. Beall
Homeland of the Republic of China, the island of Taiwan looks on the map like a seal, muzzle pointed south, resting complacently on the emerald waters of the China Sea. Any notion of placidness is qui
Jan 9, 1969
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More Jobs For Geology Spur Better Mapping Methods At Bingham Canyon
By Edward C. John, Wilbur H. Smith
At the Bingham Canyon pit operated by Kennecott's Utah Copper Division, the demand for geology has recently grown and diversified so rapidly that it has necessitated a revolution in geologic mapp
Jan 9, 1969