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  • AIME
    What Research Offers the Coal Industry

    By A. C. Fieldner

    THE total annual energy production from coal, petroleum, natural gas and water power has been increasing at a fairly constant rate during the thirty years ending in 1930. But since 1913 the demand for

    Jan 1, 1933

  • SME
    What The Client Expects From The Engineer

    By Carl L. Morris

    This short dissertation concerning "what the client expects from the engineer" is directed mainly at the design and construction of metallic ore concentration or beneficiation plants. However, practic

    Jan 1, 1969

  • SME
    What The Surface Mining Law May Mean To Blasting At Stone Quarries

    By Paul H. Miller

    After passage by the Congress, Public Law 95-87, the "Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977" was signed by President Carter on August 3, 1977. This law, in its simplest form, was intended

    Jan 1, 1978

  • AIME
    What Will Politicians Do to Silver After Centuries of Instability?

    By A. Lucian Walker

    SILVER is not only of paramount importance to millions of people as a medium of savings and to other millions as a medium of exchange, but it is also valuable and useful in industry. Mexico continues

    Jan 1, 1937

  • SME
    What's Left For Mining Opportunities In The World - The United Kingdom?

    By G. M. Clarke

    Minerals are certainly where they are found. The undemocratic distribution of the world's mineral wealth has created an incongruous inbalance: mineral-rich, scarcely populated countries supply hi

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    What's Right with Coal?

    By J. E. Tobey

    THERE are a lot of good things about this great industry of ours. Let us stop commiserating and consider some of the things that are right in this business. Coal is number one in the basic material i

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    What's Wrong With Engineering Education?

    By B. M. Larsen

    NEVER having actually tried to engage in the systematic education of anyone, and having little direct knowledge of the practical problems and limitations in the field of education, I can pose only as

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AUSIMM
    Who does the Marketing in the Race for Space?

    This paper has been developed for æThe Race for SpaceÆ conference. It ranges over various aspects, all of which are within the umbrella of marketing. The question is posed because many engineers, tunn

    Jan 1, 1999

  • AIME
    Who's Who in Mineral Engineering - The 1978 Membership Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME

    Who's Who in Mineral Engineering - The 1978 Membership Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME

    Jan 7, 1978

  • AIME
    Who's Who in Mineral Engineering - The 1979 Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME

    Who's Who in Mineral Engineering - The 1979 Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME

    Jan 7, 1979

  • AIME
    Who's Who in Mineral Engineering 1977 - SME Membership Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME

    Who's Who in Mineral Engineering 1977 - SME Membership Directory of the Society of Mining Engineers of AIME

    Jan 7, 1977

  • SME
    Why Did It Fail?

    By William E. Robinson

    Why did it fail? My first reaction when assigned this topic was to say: because somebody "goofed"--then thank you all for letting me say those few words, then promptly sit down. All of you have been

    Jan 1, 1977

  • SME
    Why Do Haul Truck Fatal Accidents Keep Occurring? "Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration (2021)"

    By Timothy J. Orr, Robin J. Burgess-Limerick, Jennica L. Bellanca, MARGARET E. RYAN

    Powered haulage continues to be a large safety concern for the mining industry, accounting for approximately 50%of the mining fatal accidents every year. Among these fatal accidents, haul-truck-relate

    Feb 22, 2021

  • AIME
    Why Not an Electrolytic Zinc Plant in the South-western United States

    By Tenney, J. B.

    DEVELOPMENT of complex ores in the south- western part of the Rocky Mountain region has been retarded by the prohibitive distance to the nearest suitable zinc treatment plants. In the north- western a

    Sep 1, 1928

  • AIME
    Wilkes-Barre Paper - Assay of Silver-Bearing Gouge-Ores

    By Charles R. Keyes, D. F. Riddell

    For a period of several years, and in a large number of oases, the Metallurgical Laboratories of the New Mexico School of Mines were employed in umpire work. During this time many important local prob

    Jan 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Wilkes-Barre Paper - Origin of Certain Bonanza Silver-Ores of the Arid Region

    By Charles R. Keyes

    In the dry regions of the globe many silver-deposits display certain remarkable features, which at the same time are so totally unlike anything met with among ore-bodies elsewhere that they hare long

    Jan 1, 1912

  • AIME
    Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Paper - New Features in Structural Geology of Anthracite Basins

    By James F. Kemp

    In earlier gears, the custom prevailed of regarding the anthracite basins as cases of folding with slight development of faulting. Folding is so pronounced and, in the eastern and western Middle Field

    Jan 1, 1922

  • SME
    Will In-Place Recovery Ever Replace the Need for Flotation? Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration

    By Robin J. Batterham, Dave J. Robinson

    The history of mineral processing in general and flotation in particular is long and has always been tied to mining methods of the day. Building on the ever-improving fundamental understanding of the

  • SME
    Winning The Global Race For Solar Silicon: Silica Ores And Their Suitability For Direct Processing

    By D. C. Lynch

    While silica ores are generally considered to have little value, those with exceptionally low B and P content have, potentially, significant worth if processed for use in photovoltaics. The sales valu

    Jan 1, 2010

  • ISEE
    Wireless Electronic Blasting

    By Daniel Mallette, Richard Goodridge, C M. Lownds

    Despite a world of mobile devices that has many of us taking the ability to communicate wirelessly for granted, an in-hole wireless initiation system was thought to be not viable. The known and common

    Jan 1, 2016