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  • CIM
    The Rheological Properties of Water Suspensions of Finely Subdivided Magnetite, Galena and Ferrosilicon

    By G. W. Govier

    Measurements of the settling rates and the rheological behaviour of heavy media formed of fine suspensions in water of each of magnetite, ferrosilicon, and galena have been made. For media ranging f

    Jan 1, 1957

  • SME
    The Rheology And Handling Of Laterite Slurries

    By Gordon R. Wicker, Peter V. Avotins, Steven S. Ahlschlager

    Laterite ore slurries exhibit Bingham plastic behavior and can be characterized by the magnitude of their yield point and Bingham viscosity. These two parameters are affected by ore composition, solid

    Jan 1, 1979

  • CIM
    The Rhodesian Copper Deposits

    By Alan Bateman

    Introduction A few years ago the name Katanga recalled, to those interested in copper, a far-off country in central Africa where deposits of huge size were beginning to pour a stream of copper into

    Jan 1, 1930

  • CIM
    The Right Tools in the Right Place: How Xstrata Nickel Australasia Increased Ni throughput at its Cosmos Plant

    By Michael Young, Josh Rubenstein, Michael Cooper, Tom Shouldice, Dan Curry

    "Xstrata Nickel Australasia’s Cosmos plant in Western Australia is currently implementing a debottlenecking project to increase nickel output while maintaining metallurgical performance and a low unit

    Jan 1, 2010

  • CIM
    The Rio Tinto's P155 Smelters Now Operating At 210 KA

    By V. Gaudreault

    Rio Tinto Alcan (RTA) has three smelters that use the Alcoa P155 technology: two in Canada (Grande-Baie and Laterrière, Saguenay, QC) and one in the United States (Sebree, Kentucky). The oldest RTA P1

    Jan 1, 2011

  • AIME
    The Rise of the State Schools (52b7bcb6-b923-4b04-b568-7b99598a5b68)

    By Thomas T., Read

    ANY discussion of State-supported schools of mining and A metallurgy needs to be prefaced by a definition, since the first school to offer a mining curriculum, the Pennsylvania Polytechnic College, wa

    Jan 1, 1941

  • AUSIMM
    The risk management and cost benefits of using a total monitoring approach to managing slope instability hazards in open pit mines

    By C Jacobsen, N Harries

    Assessing and managing instability hazards is an essential activity when working with unstable natural slopes and excavated open pit mining slopes. Slope monitoring has become the standard technique f

    Nov 29, 2022

  • AUSIMM
    The risks and challenges of using Earth rock mass classification systems on the Moon

    By R deMoraes, A Bobet

    The last decade has seen a resurgence of interest in lunar exploration and the emergence of countries like China and India as space fairing nations. In 2004, the US announced a new Vision for Space Ex

    Nov 29, 2022

  • SME
    The Risks Associated with TBM Procurement and the Next Steps toward Industry Change

    By Gary Brierley, Lok Home

    "The majority of tunnels for civil engineering applications are now being constructed using some form of mechanical excavation. Beginning in the 1960s with rock tunnel boring machines (TBM), the tunne

    Jan 9, 2018

  • SME
    The Risks in Fundamentals of Recoverable Resource Models

    By M. E. Rossi, J. A. Bassan, J. B. Novillo

    Sampling and geological models are the basis of recoverable resources models. They are pillars of mineral resources and reserves estimation, and what geostatistical methods for grade estimation should

    Jan 1, 2019

  • CIM
    The River Jordan Lead Zinc Revelstoke Mining Division, Deposit, B. C.

    By Christopher Riley

    A relatively unexplored lead zinc deposit lies about 12 miles northwest of Revelstoke, B.C., in the highly metamorphosed Monashee Group of rocks of the Shuswap Terrane, Precambrian in age. Host rocks

    Jan 1, 1961

  • DFI
    The Road To Innovation In Geotechnical Construction

    By Peter J. Nicholson

    During my more than 40 years in the practice of underground construction and engineering, the industry has seen progress from the dig down to rock or hardpan or alternatively drive concrete or steel i

  • DFI
    The Road to Innovation in Geotechnical Construction (f2290583-6329-4b39-a4c9-b746aba3a1f4)

    By Peter J. Nicholson

    "IntroductionDuring my more than 40 years in the practice of underground construction and engineering, the industry has seen progress from the dig down to rock or hardpan or alternatively drive concre

    Jan 1, 2017

  • CIM
    The Road to Production-Line Mining II -Into the Seventies

    By E. Zucker

    In this paper, as in the 1960 CIM paper of the same name, s1gmf1cant new developments in electrical-mechanical mining equipment are briefly described. These include static thyristor-supplied D.C. driv

    Jan 1, 1969

  • SME
    The Road to Zero: The 50‑Year Effort to Eliminate Roof Fall Fatalities from US Underground Coal Mines - Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration (2024)

    By Christopher Mark

    Six decades ago, the most dangerous job in the USA was mining coal underground. Roof falls were responsible for half of the deaths, killing about 100 miners every year. Fast forward to 2016 and zero r

    Mar 12, 2024

  • SME
    The Road to Zero: The Fifty-Year Effort to EliminateRoof Fall Fatalities fromU.S. Underground Coal Mines

    By Christopher Mark

    Sixty years ago, underground coal mining was the most hazardous job in the United States. Roof falls were a big part of the problem. They killed about 100 miners every year, more than all other causes

    Jul 1, 2023

  • CIM
    The Rock Burst Problem

    By G. B. Langford

    UOCK bursts are a phenomenon about which insufficient is known. This l.~ statement has a twofold meaning. In the first place, far too many people, both inside and outside of the mining industry, are w

    Jan 1, 1941

  • CIM
    The Rod Mill in the Sullivan Flow

    By H. R. Banks

    "AbstractThe rod mill introduced into the Sullivan Concentrator flow in September, 1948, replaced two sets of 74 in. by 20 in. rolls and their accompanying screens. In addition to the work formerly do

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    The Role and Viewpoint of the Chemical Industry and Its Institute on Education and Research & Development

    By W G. Forbes

    SOME 20 years ago, upon finishing second year at the University of Manitoba, I was faced with the choice of whether I wanted to be a geologist or a chemist. Accordingly, I sought out Professor Brownel

    Jan 1, 1965

  • SAIMM
    The Role Of A Department Of Metallurgical Engineering In The South African Metallurgical Industry

    The nature of metallurgical engineering?applying and optimising chemical and physical processing of ores into useful materials?is reviewed. Important trends that shape the context in which metallurgi

    Jan 1, 2003