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Ultimate Pit Limit Design Methodologies Using Computer Models - The State of the ArtBy Young C. Kim
Abstract-The use of computer models to design the ultimate open pit limits during feasibility studies as well as during long-range mine planning is becoming an enforced Practice in all types of mining
Jan 10, 1978
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Philadelphia Paper - The Amount of Manganese required to Remove the Oxygen from Iron after it has been blown in a Bessemer ConverterBy S. A. Ford
I would like to call the attention of our Bessemer steel manufacturers to a few facts in regard to the action of the manganese in the spiegel with the oxide of iron in the blown iron. The oxygen is
Jan 1, 1881
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A. I. M. E. Technical Publications, 1928[Separates of all the Technical Publications published in 1928 are available at Institute headquarters. All the papers are on file in public, university and technical libraries, and when so indicated
Jan 1, 1927
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Chicago Paper -Electricity in MiningBy F. O. Blackwell
It is roughly estimated that some three hundred companies in the United States engaged in mining and the kindred arts now employ electricity in their operations. As all these plants have been installe
Jan 1, 1894
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Institute of Metals Division - Discussion: On the Preprecipitation Process in Aluminum- Magnesium AlloysBy Ludwig Thomas, Klaus Detert
Klaus Detert and Ludwig Thomas (Westinghouse Electric Gorp.)— The results of C. Panseri and co-workers are quite important. The authors came to the same conclusions about the occurrence of zone format
Jan 1, 1964
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Radar Exploration Through Rock in Advance of Mining (2f3426f9-2525-47ab-91b4-d6e2d34df6ab)By John C. Cook
Long-wave short-pulse radar has been shown capable of exploring to distances of several hundred feet through massive, dry rock salt. Exploration distances of 30 to 60 ft through bituminous coal and ma
Jan 1, 1974
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Changing Factors in Mine ValuationBy Samuel H. Dolbear
THE value of a mine is basically dependent on its capacity to yield profits. Since the ore must be mined, treated, and sold, some of it in various future years, there is a risk involved as to future c
Jan 9, 1953
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Methods and Economies in MiningBy Carl Allen
INTRODUCTION IN any discussion of mining one is repeatedly confronted with the difficulty of dealing with so many variable conditions. It is not an exact science and in the choice of a method each va
Jan 8, 1914
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Industrial Minerals - Occurrence of Heavy Minerals in the Pebble Phosphate Deposits of Florida (Mining Tech., Sept. 1948, TP 2456, with discussion)By Frank R. Hunter
Introduction Scope of Work This paper represents the results of an investigation of the presence, amounts, and degree of concentration of heavy minerals found in the pulp of the phosphate flotation
Jan 1, 1949
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Butte Paper - The Use of the Microscope in Mining Engineering (with Discussion)By F. W. Apgar
THe valuable results that have followed the application in recent years of microscopic methods of research to problems of ore genesis have been significant, but possibly the recognition of their pract
Jan 1, 1914
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Columbus Paper - Chemical and Electrochemical Problems Involved in New Cornelia Copper Co.’s Leaching Process (with Discussion)By Henry S. Mackay
The interesting paper recently submitted by Messrs. Tobelmann and Potter1 shows that chemical problems have developed which are of great interest in this new and important branch of metallurgy. Those
Jan 1, 1921
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Monitoring the Behavior of High Rock SlopesBy W. B. Tijmann
Maintaining safe, yet economical, slope geometries in a mining operation is paramount. When design analysis and engineering judgement have dictated conservative and usually more expensive problem solu
Jan 1, 1983
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Part II - Papers - Growth and Preferred Orientations of Large Elongated Grains in Doped Tungsten SheetBy J. L. Walter
Tungsten ingots with and without small amounts of aluminum, silicon, and potassium were prepared by conventional powder-metallurgy techniques and hot-rolled to 0.001-in.-thick sheet. The ingots were r
Jan 1, 1968
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Part XI – November 1968 - Papers - Fe-Si Alloys: Ordering in the Range from 10 to 23 at. pct SiBy A. Gemperle
Electron diffraction and transmission electron microscopy on foils at room temperature were used to investigate the ordering of Fe-Si alloys containing 10 to 23 at. pct Si. A certain degree of DO3 ord
Jan 1, 1969
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Discovery Thinking In Ore-SearchBy Thomas W. Mitcham
NUMEROUS ore deposits remain to be discovered. Many exposures of favorable host rock bodies within mineral provinces have not been adequately scrutinized geologically-the ore potential in buried porti
Jan 2, 1955
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Institute of Metals Division - Etch Pits in Uranium Monocarbide (TN)By C. G. Rhodes
A technique for producing etch pits in uranium monocarbide has been developed. The pits, which are assumed to be associated with dislocations, appear individually and as arrays delineating sub-boundar
Jan 1, 1963
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Technical Notes - Nucleation Sites of Bainitic Carbides in Alloy SteelsBy H. I. Aaronson, S. M. Kaufman, G. M. Pound
WHETHER the carbides associated with bainite precipitate from the ferritic component of bainite, as originally suggested by Davenport and Bain, or from the adjacent austenite at a
Jan 1, 1958
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New York Paper - The Coking, in Beehive Ovens, of the Coals of the New River District, West VirginiaBy Charles Catlett
Having had charge during the past year of the operations of the New River Coke Company, the second largest, if not the largest, coke-producer in this district, my attention was called particularly to
Jan 1, 1900
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Philadelphia, June 1876 Paper - Deflection of GirdersBy W. S. Ayres
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Western Canadian Coals to Eastern Markets: To and Through Thunder Bay Terminal (d13ac18e-c388-4368-bf0d-09468468418c)By Michael A. Farrugia, Marcel Michaud
Remoteness of western Canadian coals has always been a barrier to the use of Canadian coals domestically. However, the world energy crunch, increased mining costs, stricter environmental controls, lab
Jan 1, 1977