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  • CIM
    Pulverized Coal as a National Asset

    By N. T. Avard

    THE profitable disposal and utilization of much of our slack coal, lignite, and other low-grade fuels is one of the major problems facing the coal mining industry of Canada today. It is my belief that

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Laboratory Tests and Milling Practice on British Columbia Gold Ores

    By W. R. McClelland

    GOLD-BEARING ores, representing many types, are found widely distributed through the Province of British Columbia. They range from those which by their nature may be considered as complex, to those wh

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Drag-Line Dredging

    By J. F. Magee

    THERE is nothing new about drag-line dredging for placer gold. The use of the separate unit for excavating preceded the large barge with bucket-line excavator mounted upon it, which has developed to a

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    The Role of the Microscope in the Study of Gold Ores

    By Maurice Hall Haycock

    ONE result of the higher price of gold has been the exploitation of many low-grade deposits, the successful treatment of which depends upon obtaining high recovery of the contained gold. Modern method

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    The Seal Harbor Mill

    By A. G. Roach

    HISTORY AND LOCATION SEAL HARBOR GOLD MINES, LIMITED, was incorporated in January, 1934, to take over 116 acres of mining lands in the Stormont gold district, Guysboro county, Nova Scotia. The nearb

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    The Recovery of Alluvial Gold

    By D. Campbell Mackenzie

    THIS paper is submitted primarily to put on record the results of a number of experiments carried out at the Wingdam mine of Consolidated Gold Alluvials of B.C., Ltd., with the object of establishing

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Recent Advances in Geophysical Prospecting

    By Hans Lundberg

    PREFACE THE successful conclusion of all geophysical work depends on the operator's skill and sound judgment, as well as on his knowledge of geology and geophysics. We have been fortunate enough

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    A New National Policy

    By C. M. Campbell

    IN 1902, a famous Canadian geologist made the following statement : ?'From what we know row of the iron-ore fields of the Province, we may feel that Ontario is assured of a great future as an iro

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Sampling and Estimation of Ore Reserves at the Hollinger

    By A. S. Robb

    SAMPLING of an ore-body is one of the fundamentals in its exploration, development, and exploitation. It is carried out to determine the gold value per ton of an ore-shoot and the probable gold output

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    The Stratigraphy and Oil and Gas Prospects of East-Central Alberta

    By G. S. Hume

    THE Plains of east-central Alberta herein described embrace an area from Viking east to the Saskatchewan boundary and from North Saskatchewan river south to Coronation and Monitor (Figure 1). By far t

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Geology at the Argosy old Mine, Casummit Lake, Ontario

    By H. C. Horwood

    INTRODUCTION THE Argosy Gold Mines, Limited, which joined the ranks of active Ontario gold producers during the summer of 1936, holds a group of 21 claims on Casummit lake, in the Patricia portion,

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Mining in the National Economy

    By The Staff

    IT is a high compliment to be invited to present a pap::r on the subject of "Mining in the National Economy". To cover it adequately would need the knowledge of the economic geologist and of the techn

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Cadillac-Malartic Area, Quebec

    By H. C. Gunning

    DURING the past year the Cadillac-Malanie area in northwestern Quebec has been catapulted to the front as one of Canada's most active gold mining districts. Late in 1934 the area was lolling alon

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Safety Phases in Mechanized Mining in the State of Washing ton

    By S. H. Ash

    No single factor in modern civilization has played a more important part in the lives of our people than mechanization in industry and to it civilization owes much of its progress. In no industry has

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Saskatchewan Bentonites

    By W. G. Worcester

    THE chief object in presenting this paper on bentonite is to attract general attention to one of the least known and most neglected industrial minerals of Canada, a mineral of extensive commercial pos

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Notes on Coal Mine Fires

    By H. C. M. Gordon

    IN every co al mine the hazard of fire in the underground workings is always present. This is a natural condition, because the mineral wrought and the supports normally used are themselves combustible

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    On an Occurrence of Nickeliferous Pyrrhotite in Nova Scotia

    By G. Vibert Douglas

    NICKEL minerals are known in New Brunswick but have never been reported from Nova Scotia. The attention of the writers was drawn to an occurrence of pyrrhotite, reported to carry nickel, at the Second

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Mineral Possibilities of the Northwest Territories

    By A. W. Jolliffee

    ANY attempt to forecast the mineral resources of a largely unknown region is hazardous and, in the case of the Northwest Territories, such a task is even more hazardous than usual. This is not merely

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Froth Flotation and Agglomerate Tabling of Nonmetallic Minerals

    By Oliver C. Ralston

    DURING the development of froth flotation for the treatment of sulphide ores, a certain amount of information was collected about a few of the nonmetallic minerals, and occasionally the gangue mineral

    Jan 1, 1937

  • CIM
    Comparison of Low vs High Discharge For Ball-Mills (Transactions, Volume XL, 1937, pp. 325-332)

    By The Hollinger Mill Staff

    MR. E. L. Longmore (l), in presenting this paper at the Annual General Meeting, suggested that it was neither desirable nor necessary to read any but the briefest portion of the paper. He wished to em

    Jan 1, 1937