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  • AIME
    Mining Engineering Notebook – Ultra-Portable Exploration Drills

    The old single-jack may have been portable- but it left much to be desired in drilling speed and depth of hole. Portable compressors for drilling can be snaked into tough spots. However, that calls fo

    Jul 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Economic Penalties Attributable to Ash Content of Steam Coals

    By Randy M. Cole, Peter J. Phillips

    A methodology is presented which quantifies six coal utilization cost components, each proportional to a coal's mineral content. These are: Ash disposal costs, coal transportation costs, plant ma

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    Harrisburg Pa. Paper - The Analysis of Iron Ores containing both Phosphoric and Titanic Acids

    By T. M. Drown, P. W. Shimer

    The precipitation of phosphoric with titanic acid, by boiling an iron solution which had been reduced to the ferrous condition by sulpharetted hydrogen or sulphurous acid, was first noticed by E. H. B

    Jan 1, 1882

  • AIME
    White Pine Experiments With Cyanide Leaching Of Copper Tailings

    By V. Lessels, D. J. Buckwalter, D. H. Rose

    At White Pine Copper Co.'s operation in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, the company has been losing more than four lbs of copper in each ton of sand tailings. With an average rate of 12,000 tpd

    Jan 8, 1967

  • AIME
    Using Geostatistics to Predict the Characteristics of Washed Coal

    Stringent controls now placed on the quality of coal make it important to be able to predict not only the tonnage and the grade of the coal in situ, but also the recovery factory and average grade aft

    Jan 1, 1985

  • AIME
    Human Response to Industrial Blasting Vibrations

    By Jules E. Jenkins

    In the past quarter century the seismograph has I played an increasingly important role in evaluating vibratory effects transmitted to adjacent communities by industrial blasting operations. In this p

    May 1, 1956

  • AIME
    Near-Surface Hydrocarbons And Petroleum Accumulation At Depth

    By Leo Horvitz

    PETROLEUM and natural gas are composed principally of the saturated hydrocarbons ranging from methane, the lightest, to nonvolatile liquids and solids containing approximately thirty-five carbon atoms

    Jan 12, 1954

  • AIME
    Republic Mine’s Hot Flotation Technique Now Handling Two Million Tons of Iron Ore Annually

    By Calvin Bjorne, John Keeley

    In the face of a highly competitive iron ore market, the Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. developed a process now being practiced at the company's Republic mine in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. By th

    Jan 6, 1964

  • AIME
    Recording of Roof Subsidence

    By H. Landsberg

    SUBSIDENCE caused by mining operations has been a matter of interest for the mining engineer for just 111 years, since the Belgian Committee for study of subsidence in the city of Liege submitted its

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    The Copper of Yunnan: An Historical Sketch

    By E-Tu Zen Sun

    Yunnan, a mountainous province in southwestern China, began to assume its place as an important producer of copper toward the end of the Ming dynasty (latter part of the 16th century), and since then

    Jan 7, 1964

  • AIME
    Oil-Impregnated Sandstone Deposits of Utah

    By Jock A. Campbell

    Oil-impregnated rocks are known to occur in 22 of the 50 states. The largest known petroleum resources of this type are in Utah, with over 95% of the inventoried total, The Utah deposits are estimated

    Jan 5, 1975

  • AIME
    Kaiser Improves Gypsum Products With Central Control

    By A. H. Tousley, L. H. Gee

    Until comparatively recently, the gypsum industry has been slow to change, often clinging to old processing methods developed a generation ago. Now, however, a highly competitive market has forced gyp

    Jan 12, 1966

  • AIME
    Recovery Of Arsenic And Other Valuable Constituents From Speiss

    By Clarence Linville

    FULTON1 says: "Speiss is an artificial arsenide of iron containing smaller amounts of other metals. In constitution it is similar to a matte except that arsenic replaces sulfur." For the purposes of t

    Jan 5, 1925

  • AIME
    The Nature Of Hastings Drilling Mud By Supercentrifuge And X-Ray Analysis

    By S. C. Oliphant, George H. Fancher

    Two samples of drilling mud from the Hastings oil field, Texas, were tested, and the solids in each were separated into small fractions of a limited range in particle size. The mineral composition of

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    The Application Of Centrifugal Forces To Gravitational Classifiers

    By Robert C. Emmett, Donald A. Dahlstrom

    FOR many years gravitational classification has been employed as a basic tool in beneficiation of minerals and coal. While improvements have been made to increase efficiency and fields of application,

    Jan 10, 1953

  • AIME
    Cyaniding Practice of Churchill Milling Co., Wonder, Nev.

    By E. E. Carpenter

    (San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) BELIEVING that the results accomplished in the mill of the Churchill Milling Co., Wonder, Nev., during the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, 1914, will be of intere

    Jan 6, 1915

  • AIME
    Destressing Test at the Galena Mine, Wallace, Idaho (294 - SEPTEMBER 1972)

    By Wilson Blake

    As a part of a USBM-ASARCO cooperative rock-burst research program, a burstprone stope pillar at the Galena mine was successfully destressed. Destressing was accomplished by blasting a single line of

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    The Engineer as a Manager

    By McAuliffe, Eugene

    THE TERM "engineer" has been defined in many ways by many men broadly speaking the statement that "an engineer is one versed in or practicing any brar1c.h of engineering" is sufficient. A rather close

    Jan 1, 1932

  • AIME
    Keretti Shaftplant and Mill

    By H. Tanner, T. Heikkinen

    In1950 studies concerning mining and milling of the approximately 17 million tons of ore remaining at Outokumpu revealed the surface facilities for economical treatment were inadequate. The two shafts

    Jul 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Utah

    NAME "Utah" is derived from the name of the Indian tribe, variously spelled "Yuta," "Ute," "Youta." "Uta." "Eutaw," and finally "Utah." It means "in the tops of the mountains," or "on the heights." Th

    Jan 1, 1925