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  • CIM
    Industrial minerals in Alberta

    By W. A. Dixon Edwards

    Industrial mineral production in Alberta, worth $468 million in 1997, comes from a dozen types of industrial minerals, mined by about 400 producers. Cement and lime from Paleozoic limestone formations

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Industrial minerals in British Columbia

    By Zdenek D. Hora

    British Columbia is an important producer of a variety of industrial minerals for both domestic and export markets. Some commodities such as limestone, dolomite, gypsum, calcium carbonate, silica, bar

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Industrial Minerals in Chemical Manufacturing

    By Alfred W. G. Wilson

    THE ultimate purpose of the Chemical Manufacturer is to produce consumer products which can be sold to customers. Such production and sales can be continued only if the operations yield a profit to th

    Jan 1, 1940

  • CIM
    Industrial Minerals in Newfoundland

    By John H. McKillop

    Industrial minerals production in Newfoundland in--creased in gross value by a total of 175 per cent during the ten-year period from 1954 to 1964. The Province accounts for all of ?Canada's fluor

    Jan 1, 1965

  • CIM
    Industrial Minerals in the National Economy

    By M. F. Goudge

    Introduction It is only fitting on this occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the incorporation of the Institute that we should indulge in a bit of retrospection and review the progress that has

    Jan 1, 1948

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals of Arizona -The State's Other Mineral Production

    By Ken A. Phillips

    Like the Arizona jeans commercial says: Arizona's not just a state, its a state of mines. Nearly 300 mines operate in Arizona making it the largest nonfuel mining state in the nation. Although co

    Jan 1, 1996

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Of Colorado

    By A. L. Hornbaker

    Colorado has recorded more than 100 years of industrial mineral production. Much of the state's history, culture, and economy is based in mining, but the industrial minerals and construction mate

    Jan 1, 1980

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Of New Zealand

    By B. N. Thompson

    The main industrial minerals produced are non-metallic - clay, dolomite, limestone, pumice, salt, serpentine, and silica sand. The other minerals, some with minor production, include diatomite, feldsp

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals of North Carolina ? Pegmatites Worked for Many Products

    By Jasper L. Stuckey

    GEOGRAPHICALLY, North Carolina consists of three divisions, the coastal plain on the east, the piedmont plateau in the center, and the Appalachian mountain region on the west. Geologically, the State

    Jan 1, 1947

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Of Washington State ? Introduction

    By Vaughn E. Livingston

    Washington State has a variety of industrial minerals and although not many are produced currently (1982) most have a history of production (table 1). The value of industrial minerals produced in the

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Industrial Minerals Record Progress Over a Wide Front

    By Oliver Bowles

    GLASS razor blades, glass chairs, and marble window panes attest that creative genius was still active in 1935. Many less striking, though doubtless more important, developments are to be recorded for

    Jan 1, 1936

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Resources: Reporting According to Clause 49 of JORC 2012

    By Andrew Scogings

    The current edition of The Australasian Joint Ore Reserves Committee (JORC) Code was published in 2012 and, after a transition period, the 2012 edition came into mandatory operation on Dec. 1, 2013.

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Review 2009

    By R. L. Virta

    Four companies mined ball call in four states in 2009, H.C. Spinks Clay Co. Inc. (owned by Lhoist Group), Kentucky-Tennessee Clay Co. (owned by Imerys Group), Old Hickory Clay Co. and Unimin Corp. Pro

    Jun 1, 2010

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Review 2010

    By R. L. Virta

    Ball Clay -- Four companies - H.C. Spinks Clay Co. Inc. (owned by Lhoist Group), Imerys Group (formerly Kentucky-Tennessee Clay Co.), Old Hickory Clay Co. and Unimin Corp. - mined ball clay in four st

    Jan 1, 2011

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Review 2012

    Editor?s note: Each year, Mining Engineering features an industrial minerals review. Several people put in a fair amount of time in developing the material for this issue, all the while doing their ow

    Jul 1, 2013

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals Review 2013

    By R. L. Virta

    Four companies ? H.C. Spinks Clay Co., Inc., Imerys, Old Hickory Clay Co., and Unimin Corp. ? mined ball clay in four states in 2013. On the basis of preliminary data, production was 1 Mt (1.1 million

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals review 2014

    "Editor’s note: Each year, Mining Engineering features an industrial minerals review. Several people put in a fair amount of time in developing the material for this issue, all the while doing their o

    Jan 1, 2014

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals review 2015

    By Daniel M. Flanagan

    "Editor’s note: Each year, Mining Engineering features an industrial minerals review. Several people put in a fair amount of time in developing the material for this issue, all the while doing their o

    Jul 1, 2016

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals review 2016

    By Jack Bedder

    "Editor’s note: We would like to thank those who make this annual issue possible. A special thank you goes out to the industrial minerals annual review editor, to the Industrial Minerals & Aggregates

    Jan 7, 2017

  • SME
    Industrial Minerals review 2017

    By Jack Bedder, Nils Backeberg

    "Native antimony metal is rare and antimony generally occurs together with gold, lead, copper and silver. There are more than 100 antimony minerals, although the sulfide mineral stibnite is the main e

    Jan 7, 2018