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Tunnel Driving At Copper Mountain, B. C.By Oscar Lachmund
DURING the driving of the main haulage level at the Copper Mountain mines of the Canada Copper Corpn., Ltd., near Princeton, B. C., some very rapid driving was clone, though no claim for a world'
Jan 3, 1919
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An Investigation On Rock Crushing Made At McGill UniversityBy John Bell
Aim of Rock-Crushing Experiments THE aim of the laboratory experiments described in this paper was twofold: 1. To measure as accurately, as possible the maximum amount of crushing that can be effect
Jan 2, 1917
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Industrial Minerals Are Big BusinessBy Charles H. Kline
Industrial minerals are the Cinderella of the mining I industry. Often considered as just dirt by traditional hard-rock miners and oil drillers, these products nonetheless comprise the second largest
Jan 1, 1970
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Acoustic Borehole Logging In A Granitic Rock Mass Subjected To HeatingBy M. S. King, B. N. P. Paulsson
Four vertical boreholes in the vicinity of an electrical heater simulating a canister of nuclear waste in a granitic rock mass have been logged with an acoustic borehole sonde before and after thirtee
Jan 1, 1982
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Cyanide In Riparian VegetationBy Daniel L. Noble
Riparian communities are those related to, or near a natural watercourse (or sometimes of a lake, impoundment, or tidewater). Generally, riparian communities contrast sharply with the dominant vegetat
Jan 1, 1983
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Chicago Paper - Tunnel Driving at Copper Mountain, B. C.By Oscar Lachmund
During the driving of the main haulage level at the Copper Mountain mines of the Canada Copper Corpn., Ltd., near Princeton, B. C., some very rapid driving was done, though no claim for a world's
Jan 1, 1920
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An Economic Model Of The Cobalt MarketBy Gregory Dybalski
The purpose of this paper is to illustrate the forecast capability of the econometric model of the cobalt industry1/ as utilized by the Federal Preparedness Agency. Forecasts from this model are illus
Jan 1, 1977
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Stability Of Slopes In Discontinuously Jointed RockBy Thomas M. Tharp
INTRODUCTION Attempts to analyze the stability of slopes, foundations and underground openings in discontinuously jointed rock have generally assumed full joint continuity or ignored the role of s
Jan 1, 1984
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Local Section News (5bb8b823-c58f-4c5d-9c73-aab99cf502a2)PENNSYLVANIA ANTHRACITE LOCAL SECTION On Saturday evening, Jan. 31, 1914, about 40 members of the Institute met at the Hotel Sterling, Wilkes Barre, Pa., for the purpose of discussing plans for the f
Jan 2, 1914
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Spherical Wave Propagation In Brittle MaterialsBy Henry F. Cooper, Lee Burford, John C. Thompson
In the past year or two, considerable effort has been expended to calculate the spherical wave propagation phenomena associated with explosions in a "hard rock" medium (Godfrey, 1969; McKay and Godfre
Jan 1, 1971
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Institute of Metals Division - Self-Diffusion in Alpha IronBy R. J. Borg, C. E. Birchenall
The self-diffusion coefficients for a iron have been deternzined between 980° and 1167° K using Fe55 as the tracer. With decreasing temperature the diffusivity was found to decrease more rapidly than
Jan 1, 1961
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Hot-milling of Rock-drill BitBy Robert Berggren
THE hot-milling process for reconditioning rock-drill bits is not new. It has been employed by a few mines for years and in the past decade it has been widely adopted, as its advantages have become be
Jan 1, 1940
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Part V – May 1968 - Papers - A Stereographic Representation of Knoop Hardness AnisotropyBy R. G. Garlick, M. Garfinkle
It was observed for several bcc metal crystals that the Knoop hardness anisotropy was dependent essentially on the direction of the lung axis of the indentor alone and not on the plane of indentation.
Jan 1, 1969
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New York Paper - An Investigation on Rock Crushing made at McGill University (with Discussion)By John W. Bell
The aim of the laboratory experiments described in this paper was twofold: 1. To measure as accurately as possible the maximum amount of crushing that can be effected by 1 hp. acting for 24 hr., by
Jan 1, 1918
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Adaptability of Various Coals as Generator Fuel in the Manufacture of Water GasBy W. W. Odell
ONCE it was believed that anthracite or coke were the only fuels generally available and suitable for the generation of water gas, particularly so when this gas was made in the generators of standard
Jan 1, 1927
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Uranium (7bee0d04-9093-4d0d-a6dd-4079309252a5)By Cyril Stanley Smith
METALLURGISTS - or at least metals - have been of central importance in most of the inventions that have shaped the course of man's history. From the first Bronze Age tools to the iron armor of t
Jan 1, 1953
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Open-Pit Forum - Western Phosphate Mining - A Growing IndustryBy Charles W. Sweetwood
THE Western phosphate field, virtually ignored for 40 years, has been undergoing a rapid climb to economic importance. Until World War II there seemed to be no reason for developing the phosphate rock
Jan 1, 1952
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Calculated Hardenability And Weldability Of Carbon And Low-Alloy SteelsBy G. G. Luther, C. E. Jackson
THE relationship between hardenability and weldability has been mentioned many times. The ease of making a hardness survey has led to its wide use as a criterion [ ] of weldability and with a given
Jan 1, 1942
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New York Paper - The Reduction of Lead from Litharge in Preliminary Assays, and the Advantages of an Oxide SlagBy E. H. Miller, E. J. Hall, M. J. Flak
It is well known that, with the exception of the so-called " niter-and-nails " method, all methods used for the fire-assay of salphide-ores,* especially those of iron, zinc, lead and copper, are very
Jan 1, 1904
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World Production Of Petroleum In 1923By E. De Golyer
THE petroleum production of the world, in 1923, for the first time reached the billion-barrel mark. A preliminary estimate of production is 1,014,413,000 bbl., an increase of 159,604,000 bbl., or 18.6
Jan 3, 1924