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  • CIM
    Metallurgical Coals of the Crowsnest Area

    By E. J. Burrough

    Coal Reserves The Crowsnest Pass coal fields form part of a greater area which comprises the Inner Foothills belt of the Alberta coal fields and the southeastern coal fields of British Columbia. The

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Spectrochemical Analysis of Palladium and Platinum Sponge

    By J. E. Hawley

    Abstract Spectrographic methods for the analysis of minor constituents such as platinum-group metals, gold, silver, and silica in palladium and platinum refinery sponge are described. These involve t

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Production of Copper Sulphate from Mine-Water Precipitate

    By A. G. Lylie

    Introduction At the Britannia Mining and Smelting Company's mill, the equivalent of 2,500 to 2,800 pounds of copper sulphate crystals per day is made from copper which is precipitated from the m

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Tungsten Carbide Tipped Rock Drill Bits

    By J. C. Heaslip

    Introduction The greatest single advance in rock drilling practice since the advent of percussion drills was the introduction of tungsten carbide tipped rock drill?bits. The evolution of rock drills

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    The Strength Characteristics of Helical Springs

    By R. C. A. Thurston

    Introduction A mechanical spring has been .defined by Wahl ( 1) as 'an elastic body whose ?primary function is? to deflect or distort under load, and which recovers its original shape when relea

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    The Equilibrium Between Copper, Zinc, and Chlorine at 1,440°K

    By J. U. MacEwan

    Introduction The equilibrium between copper, zinc, and chlorine may be considered as the simultaneous equilibrium of the two separate chemical reactions of formation of the stable chlorides of copper

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Geological Mapping, Structural Problems and the Magnetometer

    By W. Keith Buck

    Introduction During World War II years, the magnetometer was used by various field parties of the Geological Survey of Canada, specifically in the search for chromite, a strategic war mineral. Throug

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Application of Electrical Logging in Canada

    By M. P. Tixier

    Abstract In a review of the application of electrical logging in Canada, examples are .given of long and short distance correlations by means of the electrical logs. The use of MicroLogging for the

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Prospecting for Aluminum

    By McNeely DuBose

    INTRODUCTORY PROSPECTING for aluminum has always been, and still is, a peculiar combination of the technical with the physical approach, and 1 want to explain my conception of the term 'prospect

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Statistical Review of Canada's Mining Industry, 1950

    By H. McLeod

    Introduction In the period from 1939 to the present, Canada has experienced a remarkable industrial expansion, rising to probably seventh in rank amongst world countries. In the early part of this pe

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    The Development of the 'Dosco Miner

    By F. Doxey

    Introduction In order to improve outputs and to reduce or hold mining costs, many attempts have been made to mechanize the getting and loading of coal in the major coal producing countries, and machi

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Caving and Subsidence at the Copper Mountain Mine

    By W. L. Nelson

    The orebodies at Copper Mounta1n lie along and within a few hundred feet of the contact of an intrusive stock of gabbro with a series of bedded volcanic rocks of the Nicola formation. These. orebodies

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    The Poulter Seismic Method: Oilfield Techniques in the Study of Polar Ice Caps and the Contribution of Glacier Techniques in the Discovery of Oil and Minerals

    By Thomas C. Poulter

    Abstract The Poulter seismic method of geophysical exploration is an attempt to obtain an increased efficiency in the conversion of the energy of an m~pl06ion into useful energy which has directive

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    Lessons Learned from the East Malartic Fire

    By T. V. Nethery

    Introduction A brief account of the East Malartic fire is essential if this paper is to serve the purpose implied by its title. The fire originated in the timbers of No. 4 shaft at the 10th, or

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    The Work of Engineering and Research the Department Metallurgy, Ontario Foundation

    By O. W. Ellis

    Introduction During the month of September, 1928 enough money had. been promised by private individuals and corporations to comply with the Research ?Foundation Act 1928 (Chapter 57, 18 George V) o

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    The First Two Years of Milling at Renabie

    By E. G. Kearnery

    Introduction It is believed that the present paper will be of some interest, not because of any outstanding features of Renabie milling practice but because Renabie is the first gold mining propert

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    Internal Micros train and the Deformation and Failure of Metals: 1.- The Possibilities of Using the Correlation between Internal Microstrain and Magnetic Properties in the Study of Metal Failure

    By P. Cavanagh

    Summary This paper discusses the fundamental principles which allow the development of a new method for studying the deformation and failure of metals in terms of 'internal microstrains'.

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    A Simple Chemical Method of Tracing Mineralization Through Light Non-residual Overburden

    By E. O. Chisholm

    Synopsis The colour changes effected in a solution of dithizone by trace amounts of copper, lead, and zinc mineralization provide a sensitive field test for these metals. The method has been used w

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    Some Notes on Uranium in British Columbia

    By John S. Stevenson

    "Although we have no uranium- producing mines as yet in British Columbia, uranium, associated with gold and cobalt, has been found in two deposits in amounts such that the combined value of the metals

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    Airborne Electrical Surveys for Regional Studies in Oil and Ore Prospecting

    By Hans Lundberg

    An electric survey from a 'plane flown over the ground is much faster and cheaper than an electric survey carried out on the ground. The results are obtained as continuous recordings that are res

    Jan 1, 1950