Search Documents

Search Again

Search Again

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear

Refine Search

Publication Date
Clear
Organization
Organization
  • IOM3
    A method for estimating the grade of diamond deposits

    By R. Phillips

    The low concentration of diamond in workable deposits requires very large samples for grade estimation, and results, even then, may be erratic and difficult to interpret. Although the Poisson probabil

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
    Inclusion of risk assessment in open-pit design and scheduling

    By B. Denby

    sintered ores, to be removed by a pneumatic,

    Apr 1, 1995

  • IOM3
    Review of ventilation and refrigeration in deep, hot and mechanized mines in Australia

    By M. J. Howes

    The high degree of mechanisation, which is mainly diesel-powered, has a significant effect on heat loads; heat output from this source often exceeds the heat flow from the surrounding rock. The extens

    Jun 12, 1905

  • IOM3
    The atmospheric oxidation of iron pyrites

    By Winmill T. F.

    Among the various theories proposed to account for the spontaneous ignjtion of coal, one which has at times been very strongly held is that the initial heating is due to the oxidation of iron pyrites.

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    The health of old colliers: discussion

    By Haldane J. S.

    Discussion of a paper presented at the Institution of Mining Engineers' general meeting held in London on 8th June 1916 included oral contributions by Louis H., Mowat D.M., Lupton A., Bailey T.H., Bla

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    Tectonic setting of the sulphide nickel deposits of the Western Australian shield

    "The sulphide nickel resources of Australia are concentrated in the Western Australian Shield. This shield is considered to have developed by extensive, but incomplete, Proterozoic reworking of once-c

    Jan 1, 1984

  • IOM3
    Memoir of the late George May

    By Dobson C. L.

    The memoir, presented at the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers' general meeting held in Newcastle-upon-Tyne on 3rd June 1916, outlines the career of one of the Institute's

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    The influence of incombustible substances on coal-dust explosions, by A.S. Blatchford (discussion)

    Discussion following the presentation at the North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers' general meeting held in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 8th April 1916, included the author's introduct

    Dec 1, 1916

  • IOM3
    The Prevention of Spontaneous Combustion in the North Yorkshire Area

    By J. Coxon, G. W. Walker

    The paper describes the discovery, location and events concerning three types of heating which have occurred in recent years: a) in a district being salvaged, b) in the shaft pillar at an air-crossing

    May 23, 1905

  • IOM3
    The Recovery of Sulphur From Smelter Gases

    By R. W. Ruddle

    The advent of new methods of roasting, “flash roasting and fluidisation”, which are now under development, combined with the use of oxygen-enriched air, may markedly increase the SO2 content of roaste

    Jan 1, 1953

  • IOM3
    Notes on the incidence and prevention of silicosis at Broken Hill, N.S.W.

    "Prior to the publication of the General Report of the Miners' Phthisis Prevention Committee of South Africa in 1916 little attention was paid to the dust hazard and the necessity for its suppression

    Jan 1, 1947

  • IOM3
    Mine climate control, both present and future, for high production force in state temperature exceeding 40°C; a case study

    By P Shead, M A. Tuck

    Both climate and methane control have been a prime concern in the development of the workings within the Deep Soft seam at Harworth Colliery. This paper describes the numerous methods employed over th

    Jan 7, 1997

  • IOM3
    Mass transfer and interfacial phenomena in bubble-agitated systems

    By J. K. Brimacombe, F. D. Richardson

    Studies have been made of interfacial turbulence occurring in reactions in which indium, zinc and cadmium, dissolved in amalgams, are oxidised into aqueous phases by ferric or mercurous ions. It has b

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
    Broken Hill area, Australia, as a Proterozoic fold-and-thrust belt: implications for the Broken Hill base-metal deposit: discussion and authors' reply

    By A. L. W. Lips, B. P. J. Stevens, T. J. R. Bareley, E. Rothery, S. H. White

    B.P.J. Stevens contributes a further response to the authors' earlier lengthy reply regarding their paper published in Trans.IMM B, vol.104, 1995, p.B1-B17, contending that despite the positive contri

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Geological review of the agnew nickel deposit, Western Australia

    By L. G. Billington

    "The Agnew nickel deposit occurs in a major linear greenstone belt in the Archaean Eastern Goldfields Province of Western Australia, and has been subjected to mid-amphibolite facies nietamorphism of d

    Jan 1, 1984

  • IOM3
    The assessment of the management of health and safety in an organisation

    By N T. Byrom

    This paper is essentially in two parts. It describes how risk assessment fits into the overall framework of the activities required to control risk effectively within an occupational health and safety

    Jan 7, 1996

  • IOM3
    Production planning with working-slope maximum-metal pit sequences

    By D. D. Lei, H. Sevim

    Long-term production planning in open-pit mines requires the determination of cut-off grade, mining and milling production rates, a mining sequence, mine life and ultimate pit limits. Since these vari

    Jul 1, 1996

  • IOM3
    Design of mills for developing countries

    By J. C. Loretto

    The philosophy and detail of mill design in developing countries, where it is frequently difficult to obtain experienced, qualified supervision to operate the plant, are discussed. The resulting desig

    Dec 1, 1971

  • IOM3
    Monitoring subsidence over submarine coal mines in the Sydney coalfield, Canada, by bathymetric methods

    By R. C. Courtney, D. J. Forrester

    Modern advances have led to sweep and multibeam bathymetric surveying techniques that yield three-dimensional images of the sea floor and have also produced high-powered personal computers with which

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    The state of gold mining in Ghana

    By D. Mireku-Gyimah, R. S. Suglo

    Ghana contains auriferous belts which cover 51 800 km2 of its small area of 239 400 km2. From 1493 to 1600 35.5% of the world gold production was from the Gold Coast (renamed Ghana in 1957). This drop

    Jan 4, 1993