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How Management Principles Apply to Health and SafetyThere is a basic need for the health and safety manager to know what work he or she is to do and how to do it in a more professional way. Peter F. Drucker in The Practice of Management said, "The igno
Jan 11, 1979
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New York Meeting, Feb. 17 To 20, 1919The program for the Annual Meeting to be held in New York, Feb.17 to 20, 1919, inclusive, has been nearly completed. Besides the usual meetings for the reading of technical papers, the social features
Jan 12, 1918
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How to Build Pipeline Transport for Industrial MineralsBy James M. Link
The design and construction of cross-country pipelines for fluids such as crude oil appears relatively simple compared to the complex problems encountered in slurry systems. Considerable effort has be
Jan 11, 1972
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Blasting to Achieve Slope Stability in Weak RockBy C. Harries
The mechanism of blasting and the effect that blasting has on rock properties including the generation of new cracks and the opening of existing joints is discussed and compared with changes in seismi
Jan 1, 1983
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What Government Has Done to Your Financial ResourcesBy Eugene Guccione
FOREWORD-Back in October of last year, I approached three of the largest commercial banks in the country to solicit an article about the role of commercial banks in mine financing. "We'll be deli
Jan 9, 1975
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Geology - Application of Hydrothermal Zoning to Uranium ExplorationBy J. W. Gabelman
A study of spatial relations between uranium and other metal deposits and hydro thermally altered rocks in western Colorado demonstrated districtwide and regional zoning. The pattern was later found r
Jan 1, 1962
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Fuel And Oil Men To Visit Coal FieldsIt has been suggested that it would be a desirable feature in connection with the Chicago meeting of the, Institute in September to arrange for a return trip for the fuel men through the coal fields o
Jan 5, 1919
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A Microcomputer Application To Surface Coal Mine PlanningBy James H. Neisz, Gregory P. White
This paper discusses the development of surface coal mine planning programs for a microcomputer. A set of seven programs which were originally written for a large mainframe computer are described. The
Jan 1, 1983
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Scientific Methods to Design Crushing and Screening PlantsBy Malcolm D. Flavel
This article synopsizes the major conclusions of Allis-Chalmers research into crushing and screening plant design. The full text of the research findings, together with the supporting mathematical det
Jan 7, 1977
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Lake Superior Paper - On the Self-fluxing Properties of Chateaugay Magnetite, from Clinton County, N. Y., and its Treatment in the Blast FurnaceBy James P. Kimball
The object of the present memoir is to pot on record some practical experiments by the writer in smelting a silicions native magnetite with no other flux than the silicates of its own gangue.' Th
Jan 1, 1881
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The Importance Of Transportation To The Minerals IndustryBy R. S. Shrode, R. F. Bunting
Transportation is one of several important increments in the total market cost of most commodities. On a national average it has been reported that transportation accounts for about 25% of the total c
Jan 1, 1970
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Western Coals Look Good to Northwest Power CompaniesBy C. P. Davenport, Garth Duell
What are the projected electrical power needs of the nation and of the Northwest during the next 15-20 years? No one who has researched the subject has reached a substantially different result than th
Jan 10, 1972
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Petroleum Engineering Education - Is the Petroleum Industry Underengineered and, if so, to What Extent?By L. C. Uren
Some of US have been impressed with the need for a better understanding of the future place of the engineer in the petroleum industry. In academic work we are continually asked to advise students as t
Jan 1, 1929
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The Application Of Centrifugal Forces To Gravitational ClassifiersBy 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
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Specimen Proportion – Key to Better Compressive Strength TestsBy Niles E. Grosvenor
Complex underground mining problems are increasing as mining depths increase. Many of these problems have been solved mainly by unsystematized trial-and-error methods based on individual experiences.
Jan 1, 1963
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Our Diversified Organization and WorkBy William H. Bassett
RECENTLY it has become the custom of retiring presidents to talk of the relations of the Institute to its membership and its constituency- and it seems a good precedent to follow. Past-president Smith
Jan 1, 1931
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Dispersion Hardening in Copper-base and Silver-base AlloysBy J. L. Gregg
A study of copper-base and silver-base alloys was made with the object of finding, if possible, useful alloys subject to dispersion hardening. These studies led to the discovery of several alloys show
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - New York Meeting – February, 1929 - Dispersion Hardening in Copper-base and Silver-base AlloysBy J. L. Gregg
A study of copper-base and silver-base alloys was made with the object of finding, if possible, useful alloys subject to dispersion hardening. These studies led to the discovery of several alloys show
Jan 1, 1929
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Industrial Limestone Resources Along The Ohio River Valley Of KentuckyBy Garland R. Dever, Preston McGrain, George W. Ellsworth
Abstract-Limestone resources for industrial, constructional, and agricultural uses occur on the surface and at minable depths in several areas along the Ohio River and its navigable tributaries in Ken
Jan 4, 1978
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Industrial Limestone Resources Along The Ohio River Valley Of Kentucky (e5dbb377-e24a-4ea1-abf4-e30fdb53e394)By Garland R. Dever, Preston McGrain, George W. Ellsworth
Limestone resources for industrial, constructional, and agricultural uses occur on the surface and at minable depths in several areas along the Ohio River and its navigable tributaries in Kentucky. Hi
Jan 1, 1979