Search Documents

  • CIM
    Canadian Mining Credentials Program

    By Barbara Kirby

    Mining Industry HR Challenges Mining industry needs to hire approx. 100,000 workers by 2020 Attraction and retention of talent in all occupations Mobility of skilled workers between mine sites

    May 1, 2010

  • CIM
    Canadian mining automation evolution: The digital mine en route to minewide automation

    By Malcolm Scobie

    "This paper reviews the evolution of Canadian surface and underground mining automation, principally relating to: advances in communications, initial development of machine teleoperation from line-of-

    Jan 1, 1995

  • CIM
    Canadian Mining in the Seventies

    By A. E. Boone

    "The paper presents critical areas in which improved coordination of effort by industry, government and sup-pliers will be essential to continue the growth record of the Canadian mining industry into

    Jan 1, 1970

  • CIM
    Canadian Mining Innovation Council - Achieving Global Excellence in Mining Research, Education, Innovation and Commercialization

    Why innovate? ? How are we doing in Canada? ? How can we do better? ? Why now? ? What?s next? ? Lowering production costs ? Improving productivity ? Increasing value-added ? Discovering new mi

    May 1, 2008

  • CIM
    Canadian Mining Investment Opportunities in the Context of Investment Climate

    By Lo-Sun Jen

    Introduction ? Canada is one of the largest miners and explorers in the world and is a world leader in the production and export of many key mineral commodities ? Canada has a stable political regi

    May 1, 2002

  • AIME
    Canadian Mining Looks to a Bright Future ? Hope Seen for Lower Taxation and Encouragement of Prospecting

    By Kim Beattie

    IN spite of the fact that in 1944 Canada experienced a decline in production of all her leading base metals-nickel, zinc, lead, and copper; despite uncured headaches in the coal-mining industry; and c

    Jan 1, 1945

  • AIME
    Canadian Mining-Law.

    By J. M. Clark

    (Wilkes-Barre Meeting, June, 1911.) For some years past, those interested in the development of the increasingly important mining industry of Canada, have urged the adoption by the Dominion Parliamen

    Apr 1, 1911

  • CIM
    Canadian Natural Resources, Limited. An Investigation into the Rules of the Game

    By C. M. Campbell

    The Inconceivable Wealth propaganda goes on apace. Premier King, at Vancouver, has stated that we still have, untouched, natural resources, "beyond the wildest dreams." Principal Currie, in an address

    Jan 1, 1926

  • CIM
    Canadian Oil Developments, 1950

    By E. W. Shaw

    The past year (1950) has been a big one for the oil industry in Canada, with new records being set in almost every phase of exploration and development activity. New highs were reached in acreage hold

    Jan 1, 1951

  • AIME
    Canadian Oil Reserves

    By Ralph Arnold

    THOUGH production began in Canada only a short time after the discovery of oil in the United States, it has never attained large proportions, and if we were to judge entirely by the past the reserves

    Jan 7, 1922

  • CIM
    Canadian Oil Review -Progress and Problems

    By W. D. C. MacKenzie

    IT IS almost exactly fifteen years since the discovery of the Leduc oil field and, as this luncheon is part of the Thirteenth Annual Technical Meeting of the Institute's Petroleum and Natural Gas Divi

    Jan 1, 1962

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - A Method for Obtaining the Volume of Small Drifts and Working-Places, Where it is Impossible to Use a Transit

    By C. S. Herzig

    In the Engineering and Mining Journal of Jan. 27, 1900, there appeared an article by Fred T. Greene, describing a method of measuring stopes by the use of strings, a clinometer and a tape. In the e

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - A Mining Survey

    By J. F. Wilkinson

    A high degree of accuracy is often required in mine-surveying, in order that expensive mining work may not be misdirected. The making of underground connections by drifts or shafts located as the resu

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Coal Outcrops

    By Charles Catlett

    Probably no one has had occasion to examine an undeveloped coal property without hearing some hopeful or interested party insist that the bed will improve when opened some distance under cover. When t

    Jan 1, 1901

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Desulfurizing Power of Iron Blast-furnace Slags (with Discussion)

    By Joseph F. Oesterele, Richard S. McCaffery

    This investigation was undertaken to determine the quality of different iron blast-furnace slags as desulfurizing agents, and the possibility of using, in the blast furnace, materials of higher sulfur

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Desulfurizing Power of Iron Blast-furnace Slags (with Discussion)

    By Richard S. McCaffery, Joseph F. Oesterele

    This investigation was undertaken to determine the quality of different iron blast-furnace slags as desulfurizing agents, and the possibility of using, in the blast furnace, materials of higher sulfur

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Effect of Silicon on Equilibrium Diagram of System Carbon-iron near Eutectoid Points (with Discussion)

    By H. A. Schwartz, A. F. Gorton, H. R. Payne

    In a previous paper1 we published what we believed to be a correct stable equilibrium diagram for an iron-carbon alloy containing + 1.20 per cent. silicon. The purpose of the present paper is to rec

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Effect of Silicon on Equilibrium Diagram of System Carbon-iron near Eutectoid Points (with Discussion)

    By H. R. Payne, A. F. Gorton, H. A. Schwartz

    In a previous paper1 we published what we believed to be a correct stable equilibrium diagram for an iron-carbon alloy containing + 1.20 per cent. silicon. The purpose of the present paper is to rec

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Emergency Power for Mines (with Discussion)

    By Graham Bright

    Before the arrival of central-station power, all coal and metal mines generated their own power and, in many cases, these isolated power plants gave a fair continuity of service. In coal mines that pr

    Jan 1, 1923

  • AIME
    Canadian Paper - Emergency Power for Mines (with Discussion)

    By Graham Bright

    Before the arrival of central-station power, all coal and metal mines generated their own power and, in many cases, these isolated power plants gave a fair continuity of service. In coal mines that pr

    Jan 1, 1923