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  • CIM
    A Stock-Taking of the Profession with Special Reference to Exploration

    By W. L. Goodwin

    Twenty-five years ago mining engineering in Canada was not a profession. To-day the members of the mining fraternity can fairly claim for 10themselves the professional status. If their pretension is n

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Research Co-Operation Between University and Industry

    By R. S. McCaffrey

    In addition to its importance in agricultural production, Wisconsin is a very large manufacturing state and its rank in the metal working industries is probably first among the States of the Union per

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Underground Operations at the Dome Mines (9ecdfeb1-07a6-4c2d-8ca3-2b5b1b6c1ce4)

    By John B. Phillips

    The mine is entered by a central vertical shaft, strongly timbered, and containing two compartments-one for the passenger cage, the other for the large skips bringing the ore to the surface. A man-way

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Notes on Present Mining Practice at Creighton

    By J. A. Orr

    The details connected with the mining and subsequent handling of Creighton ore were fully covered in a paper presented to the Institute in 1920. The following brief notes describe certain phases of th

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Compressed Air in Cool Mines

    By Marc Piard

    In a cool mine, tapping high-pressure lines through reducing valves lowers the temperature beyond remedy. It is the writer's suggestion that, for low-pressure work, law-pressure air ,should be ge

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Synthetic Testing for Flotation

    By C. G. McLachlan

    INTRODUCTION The work described in the following paper was under-taken with a view to determining, if possible, the relative importance of some of the phenomena on which flotation seems to depend, in

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Resorption as an Agent in Freeing Hematite from the Grenville Granite Magma

    By George W. Bain

    The area in Quebec immediately north of the Ottawa river is underlain by a large area of granite gneiss intruded in lit-par-lit fashion into Grenville sediments and low silica intrusives of the Buckin

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Red Lake Area of Patricia

    By E. L. Bruce

    Red lake is a body of water some thirty miles in length lying about forty miles northwest of the outlet of Lac Seul. It forms one of several large lake expansions on a river which enters the English r

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Central Steam-Heating in Winnipeg

    By J. W. Sanger

    The establishment of a central steam-heating system in Winnipeg and its inauguration in October, 1924, has attracted a considerable amount of attention. Not only does it excite the curiosity of the en

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    A Lead and Zinc Deposit in Keewatin Iron Formation

    By E. S. Moore

    In the townships of Genoa and Marion, Subdury Mining Division, Ontario, there is a group of twenty-three mining claims known as the Jefferson claims. They are controlled by the Jefferson Mining Corpor

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    The Goudreau Gold Area

    By C. W. MacLeod

    LOCATION The Goudreau gold area in Ontario extends from a point a short distance south of the main line of the Canadian Pacific railway, at Lochalsh, in a south-westerly direction to the Magpie rive

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Portable Gas-Driven Mining Plants

    By F. A. McLean

    At the Annual Western Meeting held at Blairmore, Alta., October 1924, the writer presented a paper drawing attention -to the advantages of portable gas-driven equipment for developing isolated mining

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    A New Method of Mounting Polished Sections of Mill Products

    By Ellis Thomson

    The microscope is now used extensively not only in the examination of solid ore but also in the determination of fragmental mill products. It has therefore become a matter of paramount importance to b

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    The Examining Engineer and the Mining Industry

    By J. D. Galloway

    The mining industry of British Columbia continues to grow steadily in importance. The gross value of the production in 1925, sixty-two and a half million dollars, was a record, and ali indications poi

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Have You A Research Problem?

    By Frank E. Lathe

    During the war the National Research Council at Ottawa sent out questionnaires to the managers of nearly all the industrial plants in Canada. Inquiry was made as to the research equipment possessed, t

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Explosion At Wakesiah Mine, .Nanaimo, B.C. November .24th, 1922

    By W. H. Moore

    It seems necessary, at times, that we should reconsider some of the more obscure causes that lead to explosions of gas and coal-dust in mines, in the hope that a recapitulation will keep before us tha

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Canadian Natural Resources, Limited. An Investigation into the Rules of the Game

    By C. M. Campbell

    The Inconceivable Wealth propaganda goes on apace. Premier King, at Vancouver, has stated that we still have, untouched, natural resources, "beyond the wildest dreams." Principal Currie, in an address

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Notes On Explosives

    By E. Godfrey

    The average man one meets on the street thinks of an explosive as a medium of death and destruction, something unstable which should be given a wide berth, because he knows little or nothing about its

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Recent Mineral Discoveries in Western Quebec

    By A. O. Dufresne

    The mineral wealth of pre-Cambrian rocks in Canada has been the subject of much study by geologists and engineers (members of this Institute), particularly so in the past few years, following discover

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    The Gold Deposits of Nova Scotia: An Analysis of the History and Present Status and a Hypothesis Concerning the Structural Features of the Province in Relation to the Deposition of Gold.

    By Sir Stopford Brunton

    Gold was first found in Nova Scotia about 1830-40, but its significance at that time was not appreciated. Probably the first discovery that resulted in any work was made by Lieut. C. !'Estrange,

    Jan 1, 1926