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  • SME-ICGCM
    BORE Bolt: No Milled Notch? No Hot Notch? No Problem

    By Stephen C. Tadolini, Anand Bhagwat

    "Intrinsic supports installed in mines with limited seam or mining heights have always proven to be difficult when the required support length is longer. To date, three solutions have been used to ens

    Jan 1, 2018

  • AUSIMM
    Bored Reinforced Piles for Raise Bore Support – Four Case Studies and Guidelines Developed from Lessons Learnt

    By P Marlow

    Raiseboring is an attractive method of constructing shafts, being safe, fast and comparatively cheap. But this means back-reaming through weathered ground. However in the gravels and weathered near-su

    Mar 21, 2011

  • SME
    Bored Tunnelling in Close Proximity to Buildings—Singapore Practices

    By Keat Chuan Chew, Qiao Yue Tung, Teoh Yaw Poh

    "1 INTRODUCTION With a land area of 718 square kilometres housing a population of slightly over 5.4 million, as of 2014 (Department of Statistics Singapore 2015), Singapore is a highly urbanised city.

    Jan 1, 2016

  • SME
    Borehole (Slurry) Mining Of Coal And Uraniferous Sandstone

    By George A. Savanick

    The objective of this paper is to review advances in the art of borehole (slurry) mining made by the Bureau of Mines. The introduction gives historical and general background information on borehole m

    Jan 1, 1979

  • AIME
    Borehole at the Zenith Mine, Ely, Minnesota

    By J. B. Newsom

    SAFER, cheaper, and faster sinking of mine openings seems to have been realized with the completion of a borehole 5 ½ ft. in diameter and 1208 ft. deep, in Minnesota, during 1938. Moreover, as the ope

    Jan 1, 1939

  • AIME
    Borehole At The Zenith Mine, Ely, Minnesota

    By W. D. Haselton, J. B. Newsom

    SAFER, cheaper, and faster sinking of mine openings seems to have been realized with the completion of a borehole 5 ½ ft. in diameter and 1208 ft. deep, in Minnesota, during 1938. Moreover, as the ope

    Jan 1, 1939

  • SME
    Borehole Extensometers

    By B. P. Boisen

    INTRODUCTION Application Measurement of rock deformation is essential to stability and behavioral monitoring of underground openings. The difficulties of obtaining adequate sample distribution,

    Jan 1, 1982

  • CIM
    Borehole hoisting at Sherritt's Fox Mine

    By J. G. Kelly, C. P. Brown

    "In June 1983 a new borehole hoisting system was commissioned at Sherritt Gordon's Fox Mine. Twelve hundred tons-per-day of ore from the 2600 and 2800 levels are being hoisted to the 2000 level t

    Jan 1, 1985

  • ISEE
    Borehole Inspection with the HRS-1 Video System

    By Tom Palangio, Ralph M. Olmstead

    Video inspection of boreholes with cameras developed specifically for the mining industry is now possible. These designs are reliable, cost effective, and have the flexibility to be used in other appl

    Jan 1, 1998

  • NIOSH
    Borehole Instrumentation For Emergency Mine Rescue Operations

    By Roger L. King

    The Bureau of Mines has developed probes to be used in emergency mine rescue operations by being lowered through a borehole drilled into an underground mine. Various probes can provide two-way voice c

    Jan 1, 1976

  • SME
    Borehole Logging For Coal Evaluation

    By James K. Hallenburg

    Geophysical borehole logging is a valuable and inexpensive tool for coal deposit evaluation, development, and production. In addition to the usual determinations of depth and seam thickness, geophysic

    Jan 1, 1984

  • SME
    Borehole Logging, Structural Properties Of Rock And The Design Of Mine Openings

    By Hemendra N. Kalia

    To plan a safe and efficient coal mining operation, the design engineer should use all the available information regarding the property to be exploited. The reliability of the mining operation must be

    Jan 1, 1973

  • NIOSH
    Borehole Platened Flat Jack For Measuring Changes In Rock Stress - Objective

    Provide a means for reliable in situ stress change measurements in soft, friable geologic materials under high stress. Background Effective mine design requires a knowledge of changes in rock st

    Jan 1, 1990

  • SME
    Boring Large Hole Mine Openings

    By Erwin A. Morlan

    Present methods of boring large hole mine openings are briefly reviewed. Factors that influence the design and choice of down-the-hole equipment for rotary drilling large holes are discussed. With for

    Jan 1, 1961

  • SME
    BORON - Its Past, Present And Future ? Summary

    By D. S. Dinsmoor

    Boron, estimated to comprise about 0.001 percent of the earth's crust (Fleischer 10), as an element is never found free in nature, although its compounds are found in many localities. the bora

    Jan 1, 1958

  • TMS
    Boron and Phosphors Distribution Equilibria among the Molten Si, Slag and Metal Phases

    By Egil Krystad, Merete Tangstad, Kai Tang, Gabriella Trenell

    "A new UMG-Si refining concept has been proposed in this paper. Liquid Si and another liquid metal phase (Me) were separated by the molten slag spontaneously based on their different physicochemical p

    Jan 1, 2013

  • TMS
    Boron Carbide Powder Synthesis in a Thermal Plasma Reactor

    By Patrick R. Taylor

    Sub-micron sized boron carbide powders have been synthesized in a non-transferred arc thermal plasma reactor. Precursors for this synthesis are boric acid or boron oxide powders and methane. The powde

    Jan 1, 1994

  • AIME
    Boron In Certain Alloy Steels

    By M. C. Udy, P. C. Rosenthal

    THE use of minute boron additions to steel has been given considerable attention in recent years. Comparisons made between boron-free and boron-containing heats of otherwise identical analysis have in

    Jan 1, 1946

  • AIME
    Boston and Keweenaw

    By J. Robert Van Peli

    IT was a strange but highly fruitful marriage-that union of hardy explorers, seeking the rich treasures of copper in the Lake Superior wilderness, with Boston's aristocracy of brains, capital, an

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AIME
    Boston Meeting Sets a Standard

    THE Boston meeting, August 29-31, was in many ways one of the pleasantest the Institute has enjoyed in years. Much hard work had been done by the committee, and with excellent results. The program had

    Jan 1, 1928