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Industrial minerals in Canada; Development trends and recent initiatives at Energy, Mines and Resources Canada (38f6cd76-83a5-4d5a-96b0-5b8e70b0455c)By Jean-Yve Tremblay, Michel Prud'homme
"IntroductionIndustrial minerals include a group of more than fifty minerals which are marketed into almost all the sectors of industry; they are the backbone of many manufacturing industries. Table I
Jan 1, 1988
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Industrial Minerals in Chemical ManufacturingBy Alfred W. G. Wilson
THE ultimate purpose of the Chemical Manufacturer is to produce consumer products which can be sold to customers. Such production and sales can be continued only if the operations yield a profit to th
Jan 1, 1940
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Industrial Minerals in Chemical Manufacturing (6da18800-a20e-412a-b6f9-8564476a16cf)By Alfred W. G. Wilson
MR. F. E. LATHE: In studying any subject whatever, one should at least occasionally stand back from the canvas, as it were, and take a broad view of the picture. It is such a view of the subject of in
Jan 1, 1940
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Industrial minerals in ManitobaBy James D. Bamburak
Total mineral production in Manitoba has averaged C$1 billion over the past ten years. Industrial mineral production has comprised almost 10% of the total, with more than half coming from the aggregat
Jan 1, 2001
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Industrial Minerals in NewfoundlandBy John H. McKillop
Industrial minerals production in Newfoundland in--creased in gross value by a total of 175 per cent during the ten-year period from 1954 to 1964. The Province accounts for all of ?Canada's fluor
Jan 1, 1965
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Industrial minerals in Quebec: Production, major projects, and opportunitiesBy M. Bélanger, H. -L. Jacob
"The province of Quebec has a strong tradition in industrial minerals. Ten commodities are produced and the annual total shipments have exceeded $600 million in recent years. Quebec is a world renowne
Jan 1, 1999
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Industrial minerals in Saskatchewan: an overview of geology, production and prospectsBy Lynn I. Kelley
Potash is the primary industrial mineral produced in Saskatchewan, followed, in terms of gross value, by aggregate, sodium sulphate, salt, potassium sulphate, peat, clays, silica sand, calcium chlorid
Jan 1, 2001
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Industrial Minerals in the National EconomyBy M. F. Goudge
Introduction It is only fitting on this occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the incorporation of the Institute that we should indulge in a bit of retrospection and review the progress that has
Jan 1, 1948
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Industrial Minerals in the Non-Ferrous Metallurgical IndustryBy W. E. Newton
THE following notes are offered primarily to show that industrial minerals or their products have a much more important place in the metallurgical industry than is perhaps generally realized, and with
Jan 1, 1936
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Industrial Minerals of AlbertaBy G. J. Govett
THE RESERVES of industrial minerals of the Western Plains are probably several times more valunable than all the known deposits of metallic minerals of the Canadian Shield, though sharing little of th
Jan 1, 1959
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Industrial Minerals of British ColumbiaBy J. W. McCammon
WHEN times are booming and metal prices are high, most mining men pay little attention to the industrial mineral industry. However, when metal prices drop and mines close down, many mining eyes begin
Jan 1, 1958
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Industrial Minerals of Canada in 1938By L. H. Cole
FOR many years Industrial Minerals, or as they were formerly called, 'the Non-Metallic Minerals', compared with the metallics, were considered of only minor importance and as such were given
Jan 1, 1939
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Industrial Minerals Used In the Paint IndustryBy Joseph Bradley
THROUGHOUT this article, minerals used in the paint industry are designated 'pigments'. They may be classified in two groups: (1) Pigments which are used in the state in which they occur i
Jan 1, 1937
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Industrial natural gas technologies for the mining and metallurgy industryBy A. Zaidi
"The mining and metallurgy industry is highly energy intensive and one of the largest energy users in Canada. Energy costs are also a major component of total production costs in this industry as desc
Jan 1, 1993
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Industrial relationsBy Riggin P. R.
"IntroductionIndustrial Relations combines two very important relationships - employee relations and union relations.Employee relations always come into play when people are hired to perform tasks. Be
Jan 1, 1989
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Industrial RelationshipBy Selwyn G. Blaylock
There is no more important problem today than industrial relationship, and probably none that is receiving more thought. But in these days of Epie and Utopia, one has to be rather careful in speaking
Jan 1, 1935
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Industrial restructuring and changing world metallurgical coal trade patternsBy Roger J. Goodman
"Major industrial restructuring, which started to manifest itself in the mature economies of the Western World and Japan in the 1970s, will accelerate in the 1980s and 1990s. Conventional heavy manufa
Jan 1, 1985
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Industrial rock and mineral development and opportunities in New BrunswickBy Tim C. Webb
For almost 350 years, industrial rocks and minerals have been produced, used locally and exported from New Brunswick to markets throughout the world. Up until the early 1960s, commodities like grindst
Jan 1, 2001
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Industrial rocks and minerals in Newfoundland and Labrador: achievements and aspirationsBy Richard J. Wardle, Ambrose F. Howse
The industrial minerals industry in Newfoundland and Labrador is a significant contributor to the provincial economy. The variety ofcommodities produced reflects the diverse geological environment fro
Jan 1, 2001
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Industrial Validation of the Functional Performance Equation – A Breakthrough Tool for Improving Plant Grinding PerformanceBy Robert E. McIvor
The Functional Performance Equation for Ball Milling” was first presented in 1988. It now has been used successfully in more than a dozen mineral processing plants. This powerful, yet simple tool prov
Jan 1, 2005