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  • IOM3
    Rare earths - What is the answer to China's monopoly?

    By Schwartz M.

    The current status of the heavy and light rare-earth elements outside China is reviewed. New suppliers of the light rare-earth elements are Lynas (Australia/Malaysia) and Molycorp (USA), which are ant

    Feb 1, 2015

  • IOM3
    The only way is up

    By G. Richards

    Research shows that having more women in the top mining jobs can bring bottom-line benefits. Mining companies are starting to embrace the need for greater gender diversity at board and senior manageme

    Jul 1, 2015

  • IOM3
    Simply the Best; Presidential Address to the South Western Branch of IMinE

    By G Williams

    Discussing equipment, systems of work, the need for updated programmes of local seismic exploration, and developments within the South Wales coalfield.

    Jan 1, 1993

  • IOM3
    Recent developments in mineral exploration in the northwest highlands and islands of Scotland

    By D. Newman

    Mineral production in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland during the last ten years has been confined to the sporadic production of industrial minerals—for example marble, anorthosite, limestone, ta

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
  • IOM3
    A glimpse of the future

    By P Cochrane

    Our ability to generate information and transport it about the planet on super highways of optical fibre is about to change the way in which we communicate, work and live. There is not a single aspect

    Jan 7, 1996

  • IOM3
    Proposed changes in mineral legislation in the United Kingdom

    By Williams J. A.

    "Changes proposed in 1969 to modernize legislation governing the exploitation of mineral deposits in the United Kingdom serve as the basis for a discussion of what is considered to be a desirable fram

    Dec 30, 1971

  • IOM3
    The Institution of Mining Engineers' general meeting held in London, 8th June 1916, Sir William Garforth, Past-President, in the chair: Chairman’s opening address

    By Garforth W.

    The chairman announced the new government duties of the out-going President, Sir Thomas Holland, and the formation of a new standing committee on mining to advise the Advisory Council for Scientific a

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    Notes on the history of the safety-lamp

    By Hardwick F. W., O'Shea L. T.

    The survey covers: coal-mine lighting prior to the invention of the safety-lamp, including candles, the flint-and-steel Spedding mill, and mirrors; the growth in knowledge of firedamp; the Society in

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    Aluminium-lithium aerospace alloys: a new challenge for recycling

    By D. J. Allan, W. R. Wilson

    For conventional aerospace aluminium alloys of the 2000 (copper) and 7000 (zinc, magnesium) series the recycling of process scrap from both metal suppliers and aircraft manufacturers is a well-establi

    Jan 4, 1993

  • IOM3
    The industrial minerals sector in the United Kingdom; the importance of partnership between government and industry

    By Mike O'Shea

    Industrial minerals are extremely important to downstream industries and in our everyday lives. Their ontribution to the UK economy and to society as a whole is greatly underestimated. The industrial

    Jan 12, 1997

  • IOM3
    Exploration and the environment: the 9th international symposium in the series Prospecting in areas of glaciated terrain, held in Edinburgh, Scotland, 2-4 September 1991

    By G. P. . RiddIer

    The ninth symposium in the series 'Prospecting in areas of glaciated terrain' was organized by the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy in association with the British Geological Survey and was held i

    Jan 4, 1992

  • IOM3
    The professional engineer in the mineral industry. IMM Presidential Address delivered on 20 May 1971

    By M. G. Fleming

    The professional mineral engineer is an individual of personal integrity who has undergone rigorous intellectual instruction in the scientific disciplines fundamental to his vocation; he has learnt to

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
    The case for continuity in extractive metallurgy (the eighth Sir Julius Wernher memorial lecture of the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy, delivered in London, 4 October 1971, at the symposium on Advances in extractive metallurgy and refining)

    By J. H. Chesters

    The main, though rarely mentioned advantage, is likely to be the standardisation of best practice and product. In a batch process conditions vary cyclically, but with a continuous process they would,

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
    Mining education in the European Community

    By C. T. Shaw

    Fur a secure mineral supply position to be maintained in the Fiuropean Community there must be a supply of qualified people in the minerals industries. The education of the people required to run and

    Jan 1, 1993

  • IOM3
    Kinetics of pyrite decomposition in a fluidized bed: part 1: removal of ambient sulphur vapour is rate-limiting; part 2: influence of transfer processes in the bed

    By M. D. Gibbs, T. N. Smith, B. Verbaan

    When heated in the absence of oxygen, pyrite from refractory gold concentrates decomposes endothermically to pyrrhotite, releasing sulphur. The decomposition starts at the particle surface and progres

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Argentina - diverse and mining-friendly

    By M. Schwartz

    Mining in Argentina is diverse in terms of the number of minerals extracted from the country, but also in terms of the varied approaches and attitudes of mining investors and their trust in the countr

    Jun 1, 2015

  • IOM3
    The suppression of dust in coal-mines of Great Britain -thirty-second report to the committee on the control of atmospheric conditions and spontaneous combustion in mines-

    By J. Ivon Graham, T. D. Jones

    This paper presents methods in use in British coal-mines for the suppression of dust. While the effect of present-day treatment will not be apparent for several years, in pits in South Wales, concentr

    Jan 1, 1947

  • IOM3
    The Prevention of Spontaneous Combustion in Scottish South Area

    By W. H. McAllister

    The paper considers the geology and the coalfields that comprise the Scottish south area. It traces the history of known sources of spontaneous combustion and indicates the collieries concerned, with

    May 23, 1905

  • IOM3
    The Prevention of Spontaneous Combustion in Warwickshire, South Derbyshire and Leicestershire

    By W. R. Chambers

    A wide variety of mining conditions exists within the South Midlands Area and across this range of conditions more than one half of the mines are highly susceptible to spontaneous combustion. Two thic

    May 23, 1905