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  • SME
    Where And Why The Application Of A Large Mobile Crushing Plant Is Most Profitable

    By Boris J. Kochanowsky

    In the mobile crushing unit system trucks are replaced by a conveyor resulting in a "continuous" almost "fully-automated" operation with all its attendant advantages. In consequence, overall operating

    Jan 1, 1968

  • SME
    Where Are We Going With Fine Coal?

    By Randhir S. Sehgal

    After some decades of lying low and being treated as a second rate fuel, coal is back in the news. Production is rising. Predictions are for an ever expanding use, and they differ only in their rates

    Jan 1, 1980

  • SME
    Where Have All the Processing Plants Gone?

    By Joel Lenz, Warren Hood, Jackson Jenkins

    Whole ore or other process streams are being transported from mines to remote processing facilities for multiple reasons, such as improved project economics, maximum utilization of capital, and minimi

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SME
    Where We Are In Flotation Chemistry After 70 Years Of Research

    By D. W. Fuerstenau

    The success of industrial flotation separations has been the design of specific chemical schemes for regulating the bulk and the surface chemistry of the system. Highlights of fundamental research on

    Jan 1, 1995

  • SME
    Whisker Growth During The Reduction Of Iron-Ores

    By Werner Wenzel

    Whisker growth during the reduction of iron ores The phenomenon of whisker growth can be observed in a number of solid-state crystallisation reactions, which, apparently, appear in6 the first ins

    Jan 1, 1971

  • SME
    White Pine Copper-An Environmental And Economic Assessment

    By Ronald M. Hays

    The White Pine Copper Division of Copper Range Company is a large copper producer operating an underground mine, mill, and smelter on Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Principal water discharges are fr

    Jan 1, 1979

  • SME
    White River Nahcolite Solution Mine

    By R. Day

    Nahcolite is a naturally occurring sodium bicarbonate mineral found principally in the Piceance Creek Basin of northwest Colorado. An 8-m thick nahcolite bed, 610 m below the surface, is the target of

    Jan 1, 1994

  • SME
    Whither Gravity, Magnetic and Electrostatic Separations?

    By F. F. Aplan

    Estimations have been made of the tonnage of raw ores and coal treated by various beneficiation processes. The amount treated by gravity concentration is substantially greater than that treated by flo

    Jan 1, 1989

  • SME
    Whither Mining Engineering Education?

    By J. J. K. Daemen

    Mining Engineering education is in trouble, if not in crisis. The most visible signs are the decrease in the number of programs that offer the degree, and the continued difficulties in attracting stud

    Jan 1, 2004

  • SME
    Who Needs Diesel Engines In The Mining Industry?

    By S. O. Ogden

    As most of you have probably surmised from the title of my paper, I am here today to talk with you about the use of diesel engines in the American mining industry and whether or not the free choice to

    Jan 1, 1978

  • SME
    Whodunit: Using Expert Witnesses in Environmental Litigation

    By Laura J. Carroll, Gordon A. Goldsmith

    Experts, like many of the speakers at the SME Annual Conference, are frequently called upon by lawyers to assist them in litigation. Due to the technical nature of many cases, the testimony of an expe

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SME
    Whole Body Gamma Ray Exposures To Personnel Decontaminating A Uranium Millsite

    By Ben Benally, Joseph M. Hans

    INTRODUCTION The decontamination of the former Shiprock uranium millsite and the interim stabilization of its tailings piles began in March 1974, and ended in June 1978. Personnel monitoring for wh

    Jan 1, 1981

  • SME
    Whole-body vibration exposure comparison of seat designs for low- and mid-seam shuttle cars in underground coal mines - SME Transactions 2009

    By A. G. Mayton, D. H. Ambrose, C. C. Jobes, N. K. Kittusamy

    In a systematic study, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) evaluated seat designs in low- and mid-seam shuttle cars during production operations at two underground coal m

    Jan 1, 2009

  • SME
    Why "World Code" Has To Cover All Mineral Resources, Not Only "Reserves"

    By Andrej Šubelj

    The paper tries to determine all which are interested or involved in collecting, evaluating, processing and distributing data on mineral resources, either "economic" or "uneconomic" and for what purpo

    Jan 1, 2002

  • SME
    Why Ammonia-Cyanide Mixtures are Better than Either Cyanide or Ammonia for Leaching Copper-Gold Ores

    By Stephen LaBrooy, David Muir

    Gold ores in the geologically more recent rocks are often associated with copper minerals which pose problems of high reagent consumption with conventional cyanidation practice. Many examples exist in

    Jan 1, 1993

  • SME
    Why an Industry Education City for the Tunnelling Sector - NAT2024

    By Ross K. Digby

    The Victorian Tunnelling Centre (VTC) has evolved its purpose from purely training workers, to a tunnelling industry education city. The VTC has now focused its activities on the areas of technology;

    Jun 23, 2024

  • SME
    Why Bother With Computer Control?

    By P. F. Mataich

    "Why bother with computer control?" This question and others like it have been heard over and over again by those who have tried to convince operating men that there are sound merits to installing a p

    Jan 1, 1965

  • SME
    Why Copper Prices Are Going To Triple Over The Next Decade

    By Robin Adams

    After nearly five years of economic hardship, the world copper industry is, in our opinion, about to enter a period of considerable strength. This opinion is based on three main propositions, namely:

    Jan 1, 1979

  • SME
    Why Did It Fail?

    By William E. Robinson

    Why did it fail? My first reaction when assigned this topic was to say: because somebody "goofed"--then thank you all for letting me say those few words, then promptly sit down. All of you have been

    Jan 1, 1977

  • SME
    Why Do Haul Truck Fatal Accidents Keep Occurring? "Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration (2021)"

    By Timothy J. Orr, Robin J. Burgess-Limerick, Jennica L. Bellanca, MARGARET E. RYAN

    Powered haulage continues to be a large safety concern for the mining industry, accounting for approximately 50%of the mining fatal accidents every year. Among these fatal accidents, haul-truck-relate

    Feb 22, 2021