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  • AIME
    How the Mining Industry Can Survive Governmental and Environmental Restrictions

    By Jack F. Havard, John S. Lagarias

    When ore bodies are faulted or mill feed turns refractory, mining managers and engineers act vigorously to convert imminent failure into eventual success. The recent proliferation of onerous environme

    Jan 1, 1979

  • CIM
    How the Mining Industry is Responding to Pressures for Change in the Management of Mine Waste

    By Don Welch

    Pressures for change ?Land use constraints ?Project financing ?Local communities ?Environmental issues ?Sustainability requirements ?Stricter regulatory procedures ?Technical excellence ?Reduc

    May 1, 2010

  • NIOSH
    How the Nature of Raw Coal Influences its Cleaning

    By F. F. Aplan

    "The material known as coal has a highly variable composition. As a consequence, coals show a great variation in their physical and chemical properties as a function of coal rank. The situation is fur

    Jan 1, 1989

  • AIME
    How the Products are Sold

    By G. H. LeFevre

    THE Metal Sales Department, with offices in New York, is responsible for the sale of the Company's products, with the exception of gold and coal. At present the department handles the sales of le

    Jan 1, 1948

  • SME
    How The Recent Federal Storage Tank Regulations Affect The Mining Industry

    By Richard M. Winar

    In September of 1988, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) published final regulations that effect owners and operators of underground storage tanks (USTs). These regulation incl

    Jan 1, 1990

  • AIME
    How The Six Cleanest U. S. Longwalls Stay In Compliance

    By Robert A. Jankowski, Charles D. Taylor

    The objective of this program was to conduct dust surveys at six longwall sections having double-drum shearers, that were regularly in compliance, and to identify the dust control techniques that were

    Jan 1, 1982

  • NIOSH
    How The Six Cleanest U.S. Longwalls Stay In Compliance -Objective

    To identify the most successful methods now in use for controlling respirable dust in longwall mines using double-drum shearers. Approach Conduct dust surveys at six longwall mining sections that

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    How the St. Joseph Lead Company Grew ? A Forward-Looking Management Builds a Great Enterprise From a Small Missouri Mine

    By Irwin H. Cornell

    BRIEFLY stated, the history of the St. Joseph Lead Co. is the story of how a group of men, working for ten years as officers without salaries and stockholders without dividends, developed a small mine

    Jan 1, 1947

  • AIME
    How the State Department Can Aid Foreign Oil Development

    By Lester Woolsey

    THE State Department can be of assistance to Americans in the petroleum business directly and indirectly. During the past few months, at the Arms Conference, it had a large hand in dealing with affair

    Jan 7, 1922

  • ISEE
    How the USDA Uses Explosives to Remove Beaver Dams in Unique Locations

    By Bruce R. Leland, Steven H. Smith, John D. Paulson

    The USDA - Wildlife Services has been removing beaver dams with explosives for over 30 years. This paper will discuss the history of the explosives program, summarize how we've evolved, and highlight

    Feb 1, 2020

  • AUSIMM
    How the Use of Market-Based Risk Metrics can Undervalue Good Mining Projects and Overvalue Poor Ones

    By T Y. Dube

    In this paper current net present value (NPV) based mine valuation techniques that take into account market and private risk are discussed and analysed. Potential pitfalls that arise from the applicat

    May 24, 2012

  • AIME
    How The World Looks From Japan; Capital Rich Yet Resources Poor

    By Robert A. Brusca

    OUTLINE Mineral Poor, but great primary inputs Net importer of most primary inputs • Copper • Zinc • Aluminum • Oil Problems for Japan • Supply Disruption • Currency Swings

    Jan 1, 1990

  • AIME
    How the World's Largest Engineering Society Came into Existence

    By AIME AIME

    I N JUNE, 1918, at a meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in Worcester, Mass;, a resolution was adopted for a committee to investigate the aims and organization of that society. Thi

    Jan 1, 1920

  • ISEE
    How Things Have Changed

    By Lance McAnuff

    The year 2001 coincided with the forty-fifth year of blasting-control specialization by the author. Commencing with the construction of the Saint Lawrence Seaway System in 1956 and continuing until th

    Jan 1, 2002

  • ISEE
    How to Achieve 100% of Advance in Tunnel

    By Alan Diaz Butron, Eng. Thierry Bernard

    "In tunnel blasting the most challenging objective is definitively obtaining the maximum advanceassociated to a minimum overbreak. Achieving 100% of advance with no overbreak is the targetchallenge by

    Jan 1, 2017

  • CIM
    How to Achieve Operational Reliability in the Natural Resources and Petroleum Industries

    By Emilio Giuseppe Sarno Severi

    Mining and Petroleum Similar Industries ?Asset Intensive ?Exposed to market volatility ?Highly Risky Operations ?Scarcity of Experienced and Trained resources ?Operating in diverse countries wi

    Nov 1, 2011

  • TMS
    How To Analyze For Cyanide

    By Emil B. Milosavljevic

    Problems associated with distillation and other classical methods for analyzing operationally defined cyanide (CATC, WAD, Total and Free Cyanide) will be discussed. These methods often achieve incompl

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SME
    How To Avoid Building A Full Scale Pilot Plant By Predicting And Eliminating Solids Handling Problems (618f278c-f937-4352-bac2-c83092193a2d)

    By J. R. Johanson

    Many solids processes that look feasible on paper or even in pilot studies become disasters in full scale. Changes in solids flow characteristics from pilot scale to full scale because of larger so li

    Jan 1, 1988

  • SME
    How to avoid building a full- scale pilot plant by predicting and eliminating solids handling problems

    By Jerry R. Johanson

    Introduction Many solids processes that look feasible on paper or even in pilot studies become disasters in full scale. Changes in solids flow characteristics from pilot scale to full scale be- ca

    Jan 1, 1990

  • CIM
    How to be a Survivor

    By W. G. Johnson

    "As we move into 1983, Canada is not only in a deep recession, there are major changes taking place.International competition is growing fiercer.Major core industries such as automobile, steel, mining

    Jan 1, 1983