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An Evaluation of Building Dimension Stone Deposits
By W. Robert Power
Petrographically these range from true granite and syenite to gabbro and anorthosite. Commercial limestone is any sedimentary rock composed predominantly of the minerals calcite and/or dolomite. C
Jan 6, 1972
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Mechanization of Rock Drilling at Inco
By G. R. Green, R. C. McDonald
I n 1966 a major expansion program in Canada was undertaken by Inco to meet increasing nickel requirements. Coinciding as it did with a severe labor shortage, a large portion of this expanded producti
Jan 6, 1972
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Ocean Mineral Terminals: 4 Case Studies On
By John Sasadi, Karl Heinz Zepter, Leonard Sugin, Roger L. Hulette
Mt. Newman Mining Co. is now completing an expansion program, begun even before initial construction was complete, which will result in the ability to ship up to 35 million tpy of iron ore by early 19
Jan 6, 1972
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Why Syngas From Coal?
By James R. Garvey
Coal reserves of the United States are enormous. Considered on the basis of proven reserves, and compared with reserves of other fuels, coal constitutes 88% of the proven recoverable energy resources
Jan 6, 1972
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Pollution Pays Off in Tasmanian Copper Town
Tourism is the second largest industry in the Tasmanian copper mining center of Queenstown, Australia, but it is not the historic mine the tourists come to see. The attraction is rather the devastatio
Jan 6, 1972
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Climax Moly’s 30,000 TPD Henderson Mill is Off the Drawing Board
By J. D. Vincent, Paul A. Weyler
Climax Molybdenum's plan for the Henderson 30,000 tpd molybdenite plant didn't just happen. It slowly evolved over a period of 3% years. Many plants cannot afford similar delays, but the Hen
Jan 5, 1972
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Mining in the Far North
By George E. Aiken
Subzero temperatures of the Arctic pose some critical engineering problems for the developer and operator of open pit mines. Undoubtedly, the single most troublesome manifestation of this climate is p
Jan 5, 1972
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Ammonia Revival for the Keweenaw?
By R. S. Shoemaker
Mines are closed for two reasons; exhaustion of ore or insufficient price for the mineral. On the other hand, the reopening of an old mine can be the result of any one of three events; the discovery o
Jan 5, 1972
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Lead and Zinc People Meet in Montreal
Montreal, April 6-7. "Resilient" and "bullish" were the terms used by R. D. Mushlitz of Asarco and K. C. Hendrick of Noranda Sales Corp. respectively, to describe the near term prospects for lead and
Jan 5, 1972
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Population, Politics and Potash
By John B. Mitchell
Approximately 90% of all potash produced is employed as a fertilizer, either directly or with nitrogen and phosphorus. The remaining 10% is utilized in the manufacture of other chemical products. The
Jan 5, 1972
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Sensitivity Analysis of Cash-Flow Factors to Discounted Rate of Return – A Decision Making Tool
By Joseph M. Chelini
A cash-flow factor is any figure acquired in an evaluation that effects the cash flow potential of an eventual operation. Table I is a list of some of these cash-flow factors. There are more, such as,
Jan 5, 1972
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Case Study: Sherritt’s Gordon’s New Fox Lake Copper-Zinc Concentrator
By Garry M. Hughes
Sherritt's new, 3000 tpd, copper- zinc Fox mine is situated 30 miles southwest of Lynn Lake. The copper-zinc orebody is part of a large body of massive and semi-massive sulfides consisting chiefl
Jan 4, 1972
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How San Manuel Doubled Drift Footage
By Donald A. Cumming
Since the first major mine development, the company has continually looked for ways of improving drifting methods. The planned increase in production to 60,000 tpd, and the lack of trained personnel,
Jan 4, 1972
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The Challenge of Natural Resource Investing – A Mutual Fund Point of View
By George A. Roche
Investment in growth stocks is the most assured way of achieving superior, long term investment accomplishment. There are many criteria used to select growth companies but the most important is a com
Jan 4, 1972
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Stratigraphy is a Sometimes Overlooked Guide to Porphyry Coppers
By Theodore H. Eyde
In the southwest porphyry copper province, the virgin prospect with good copper mineralization cropping out has disappeared. Future discoveries will require an increasingly sophisticated arsenal of ex
Jan 4, 1972
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Magma’s San Manuel Gets a New Electrolytic Refinery
The recent dedication of Magma Copper Co.'s San Manuel, Ariz., electrolytic copper refinery and rod casting plant marks the culmination of a three year, $250 million expansion-modernization progr
Jan 3, 1972
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Copper in a Changing World
By Charles M. Brinckerhoff
When I first went to Arizona in 1925, mining was primarily an underground job. Ajo, Sacramento Hill in Bisbee and Jerome were the only open pit operations in the state. Thousands of men, however, were
Jan 3, 1972
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Conveyor Belting in the 70’s
By P. J. Connors, William J. McCormick, F. B. Olender, Jerome F. Sheldon, Donald T. Mylar, Edgar T. Gregory, Owen S. Roberts, H. Colijn
A quiet revolution has taken place in the conveyor belt industry. Man-made materials, improved production facilities, better splicing techniques and emphasis on repair and maintenance have all contrib
Jan 3, 1972
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Choosing The Proper Borehole Size For Bench Blasting
By James J. Olson, Richard A. Dick
Blasting practices have shown a recent trend toward larger blastholes and larger burdens and spacings, although some operators, after reconsidering the situation have gone back to smaller blasthole si
Jan 3, 1972
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Minerals Beneficiation (63a8a76a-b46b-4409-a16d-a7c63a87142d)
By Burt C. Mariacher
To note that environmental considerations had a major im¬pact on the minerals processing industry in 1971 would be something less than a profound observation. The degree of its importance was demonstr
Jan 2, 1972