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Australia's Slow Entry Into The Nuclear AgeBy Eugene Guccione
Australia could eventually become a major world supplier of uranium oxide-but how quickly that happens depends on the outcome of a highly complex and emotional battle among different special interests
Jan 1, 1977
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Technical Advance on the Mesabi Iron RangeBy Rztssell H. Bennett
A SURVEY of the Mesabi Range iron-ore industry demonstrates that a satisfactory degree of technical progress has been achieved in the last fifteen years. This advance has not been made over a uniform
Jan 1, 1932
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Operating Conditions at Tonopah Extension MineBy JOHN LANE DYNAN
HE Tonopah Extension property consisted originally of three claims, with an area of 38 acres. In 1902 a shaft, now known as No. 1, was started near the eastern end of the property, close to the Tonopa
Jan 1, 1921
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New York Paper - Environmental Conditions of Deposition of Coal (with Discussion)By David White
Jan 1, 1925
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Deepsea Ventures Readying Its Attack On Pacific NodulesBy A. Blake Caldwell
The continental margins and ocean basins represent by far the largest unexplored frontier for discovery and development of mineral values. In April 1971, Deepsea Ventures, Inc., at a press conference
Jan 1, 1971
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Electrification - Electrification of the Climax Molybdenum Company's Plant at Climax, Colorado (T. P. 1734, Mining Tech., July 1944)By F. O. Garrabrant
Power is furnished to the Climax Molybdenum Co. by the Public Service Co. of Colorado over two 100,000-volt lines to a bank of three 3333-kva. transformers 100/13.8 kv. These transformers are so desig
Jan 1, 1946
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Cinnabar At CorderoBy E. L. Fisk
First discovered and claimed in 1929, the Cordero cinnabar deposit lies 11 road miles southwest of McDermitt, Nev., near the Nevada-Oregon boundary. The name "Cordero" means "little lamb" in the Basqu
Jan 11, 1961
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Metallized Slurry Blasting At Eagle MountainBy H. M. Conger
Kaiser Steel Corporation's Eagle Mountain mine is located in the Colorado Desert, 60 miles east of Indio, California. Iron concentrates from the mine are shipped by rail 164 miles to the' Co
Jan 11, 1965
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Lime Scale as a ConcentrateBy R. E., Head
THE use of lime in flotation has become so general in recent years that its functions are familiar to plant operators. The conditions and phenomena described in this paper are of interest because they
Jan 1, 1928
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Performance Tests of an Experimental Installation of Cyclone Thickeners at the Shamrock MineBy T. Fraser, R. L. Sutherland
Under a cooperative agreement between United States Bureau of Mines and the Truax-Traer Coal Company, some operating-scale experiments have been made with the cyclone thickener in the preparation plan
Jan 1, 1949
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Ready-Made Heat From CoalBy D. W. Loucks
There is plenty of evidence to indicate that at least one of man's chief interests in life is to make himself as comfortable as possible. If you doubt this, just watch the fellow next to you for
Jan 1, 1949
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The Economics of the Offshore Contract Drilling Industry: Implications for the OperatorBy Mark David Rankin
This paper represents a general assessment of the primary factors driving the market for mobile offshore drilling rigs and the utility of those factors as choice variables for the offshore drilling pr
Jan 1, 1982
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Electrification at Climax - All Power Purchased and Distributed at 13,800 VoltsBy F. O., Garrabrant
ELECTRIC power requirements for Climax are similar to those of most metal mines, except that large blocks of power are used underground and there are a number of other unusual applications. Power is
Jan 1, 1946
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Southern Research Institute ? New Commercial Laboratories To Have Headquarters at BirminghamBy Milton H. Fies
EARLY in 1945 the laboratories of the Southern Research Institute will begin active research investigations on behalf of industrial clients. This achievement has come after four years of planning by a
Jan 1, 1945
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Petroleum Division Finds Economics of Dominant InterestBy Earl Oliver
SEVERAL notable papers, and free discussion on many controversial subjects, marked the various sessions of the Petroleum Division at the annual meeting. The Division first convened on Tuesday afternoo
Jan 1, 1932
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Should Minera1 Indications by Geophysical Prospecting Be Equivalent to Discovery for Location of Mining Claims and to Assessment Work?By AIME AIME
THE second session on geophysical prospecting at the February meeting of the Institute was a discussion of the mining law and the bearing of the new method of search on location of claims and assessme
Jan 1, 1929
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Presentation of Honorary Membership to Sir Harold CarpenterBy AIME AIME
SIR HENRY CORT HAROLD CARPENTER, F. R. S. professor of metallurgy at the Royal School of Mines, was presented with his Honorary Membership certificate in the A.I.M.E. on Oct. 18, at a luncheon in his
Jan 1, 1938
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Impressions of the - Rand : Geologic and EconomicBy AIME AIME
L. C. GRATON, professor of geology in Harvard University, addressed the New York Section on April 24 on-his impressions of the Rand. His beautifully clear and concise address was delivered without not
Jan 1, 1929
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World Gold Production Costs: Part I, The AmericasBy John J. Cioston
THE steadily rising flood of gold production from all parts of the world has created an avalanche of rumors regarding the stability of the present price of this metal. Markets have been unsettled from
Jan 1, 1937
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Some New Trends Seen as the Oil Industry Attacks Its Wartime Economic ProblemsBy Norman D. Fitzgerald
IN 1943 the petroleum industry completed a series of practical adjustments to the acute problems which dominated the scene a year earlier. The crisis in petroleum transportation from the Gulf Coast to
Jan 1, 1944