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Abstract Page - Fundamental Approaches in Longwall Dust Control
By R. A. Jankowsi, S. K. Ruggieri
Airborne respirable dust levels on longwalls can be reduced if operators approach the dust control problem in a logical and fundamental manner. This can be accomplished through the proper application
Jan 6, 1985
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Proper management during prosperous times will lessen impact of tough times
By William A. Griffith
The recent recession has severely impacted the performance and results of virtually all of our natural resource companies. The depressing climate continues to linger and recovery maybe sometime away.
Jan 6, 1985
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Movement of Diesel Powered Vehicles as a Factor Influencing Environmental Health Standards in Mine Dead-End Headings
Diesel powered machines are doing some specific operations in the cyclic order required by the technical process. The dynamics of this process in certain conditions has an essential influence on envir
Jan 6, 1985
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Computer-aided mapping and design — Their potential for mining use
By Kim W. Wright
Introduction Mining operations require maps for each phase of project development. Engineering plans, cross-sections, and isometric drawings are also needed. Maps are used for geologic interpretation
Jan 6, 1985
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American steelmaking is becoming a market-oriented enterprise
By Frank W. Luerssen
Introduction "Austerity" is perhaps an overly generous description of the past three years in the American steel industry. Steel plants operated at an average of only 57% of their capability in 1982-
Jan 6, 1985
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Strong reserve bases are key to oil companies surviving over the long-term
By Wilfred P. Schmoe
Introduction An integrated oil company has two options in approaching strategic planning. It has to decide whether it is in business for the long-term. I state this in all seriousness. Those who help
Jan 6, 1985
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Precious metals exploration fails to makeup for declines in other minerals
By E. D. Attanasi, J. H. DeYoung
Mineral exploration activity in the US suffered through another depressed year in 1984. And continued strength in precious metals (and possibly industrial minerals) exploration failed to make up for d
Jan 5, 1985
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All in all, industrial minerals industry is alive and well
By Stanley Lefond
The health of the industrial minerals industry appears to be improving year by year. In fact, preliminary information suggests that only three commodities (asbestos, bromine, and sulfur-other) failed
Jan 5, 1985
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Banner year for coal production shadowed by year-end oversupply
By J. Hoover
Real growth in the economy, increasing demand for electricity, and consumer stockpiling for a possible United Mineworkers of America (UMW) strike in October made 1984 a banner year for coal. Productio
Jan 5, 1985
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Processing researchers continue efforts to streamline US mining
By P. Rosten
US mine production of iron ore in 1984 showed some improvements compared to 1983. But reduced demand from the iron and steel industry caused temporary shutdowns of many iron ore mines and pelletizing
Jan 5, 1985
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Strong dollar and imports steal momentum from US mining recovery
By J. D. Morgan
Demand for nonfuel minerals depends on the overall state of the economy, which steadily improved each quarter in 1984. New housing starts rose to 1.8 million units. Automakers turned out about 15% mor
Jan 5, 1985
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Lysimeters allow quicker monitoring of heap leaching and tailing sites
By William R. Bond, Jim V. Rouse
Introduction The pressure/vacuum (p/v) lysimeter or soil water sampler has become useful for monitoring vadose zone or unsaturated zone water conditions. The soil water sampler was first introduced a
Jan 4, 1985
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New method allows for anchorage checkfor rock bolts
By Gene Mattila, Ron Boyd
Introduction Rock bolting is a general term that encompasses pinning, roof bolting, rib bolting, and cable bolting. Rock bolting contributes the highest nonproductive cost and is the most significant
Jan 4, 1985
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Technical Note - In-seam seismic surveys using controlled waveform source transducers
By J. J. Snodgrass
Faults, sandstone channels, and abandoned mine workings present severe safety hazards, disrupt mining, and necessitate costly precautions or discontinuance of operations. In addition to fault detectio
Jan 4, 1985
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Shutdown and restart at Pinto Valley - a maintenance viewpoint
By Robert S. Shank
Introduction The Pinto Valley open-pit copper mine is located in southern Arizona, 11 km (7 miles) west of Miami. Production at Pinto Valley began in 1974. About 350 Mt (386 million st) of ore and wa
Jan 4, 1985
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Discussion - Impacts of land use planning on mineral resources
By R. J. Sweigard, R. V. Ramani
G.F. Learning The paper by R.V. Ramani and R.J. Sweigard is a wonderful description of the labyrinthine web that has been spun about the mining industry by energetic bureaucrats and politicians ove
Jan 4, 1985
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Longwall mining in the US : Where do we go from here
By Syd S. Peng
Introduction Modern longwall mining, introduced to the US coal industry in the mid-1960s, is the latest coal mining technique. Today, longwall mining produces more than 15% of all underground coal pr
Jan 3, 1985
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California’s Mother Lode: The legend of ’49
By Sandy Clamage
"Seeing the elephant" was a term often heard from 1849 to 1859, the period of the great California Gold Rush. The phrase was used by those who dreamed of instant wealth that was believed could be foun
Jan 3, 1985
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Look taken at petroleum’s impact on the minerals industry
By Russell L. Wood
Introduction It is the morning after and there is one monumental hangover among many, if not most, of the oil companies that invested in mining in the past decade. How an oil company looks at mini
Jan 3, 1985
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Technical Note - Correcting the burden formula for heave blasting
By S. D. Thompson
An AIME transaction by P.L. Allsman (1960), "Analysis of Explosive Action in Breaking Rock," contains many useful concepts applicable to blast design. Of special interest was the derivation of a heave
Jan 3, 1985