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  • NIOSH
    Best Practices And Bolting Machine Innovations For Roof Screening

    By S. B. Robertson, D. R. Dolinar, G. E. Hinshaw, G. M. Molinda, D. M. Pappas

    Rock falls in coal mines cause many injuries each year. Most of these injuries are not caused by major roof collapses, but from falls of smaller rocks from the immediate top or roof skin. Even though

  • SME
    Best Practices for Ensuring Safety in Field Studies: A Comprehensive Guide for Mining Researchers and Operators - SME Annual Meeting 2024

    By Todd Minoski, Matthew McElhinney, Morgan Sears, Craig Compton

    In an effort to advance the science underlying ground control engineering, researchers with the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) are frequently involved in field studies a

    Feb 1, 2024

  • DFI
    Best Practices for Soil Mixing Near Sensitive Structures

    By Joseph A. Mann

    "Soil mixing is a proven solution for the construction of ground improvement adjacent to sensitive structures due to the use of computer controlled and monitored equipment. The precision to which geom

    Jan 1, 2015

  • CIM
    Best Practices In Drying And Calcining Of Yellowcake

    By S. Kashani Nejad, M. Bellino, K. Collins, C. Tovee, J. Godwin

    Motivated by safety considerations, logistical issues, transportation cost savings, product diversification, and marketing preferences, several uranium producers are revisiting their business models a

    Jan 1, 2020

  • SME
    Best Practices In Material Selection And Design For Hydrometallurgical Equipment

    By T. Johnson

    Mining activity in a number of metal ores has been running quite high over the last few years. In particular, those metals that employ acid functional extraction processes such as copper, nickel, coba

    Feb 27, 2013

  • AIME
    Best Year for Gold and the Worst for Silver

    By Scott Turner

    GOLD AND SILVER, the monetary metals, have presented in the last year a striking contrast; gold has experienced unusual prosperity, while silver has been depressed more severely than ever before. Gold

    Jan 1, 1933

  • CIM
    Best-Practice Considerations for Bullion Handling

    By M. Somppi, Z. Yamak

    "Gold producers invest significant effort in mining, processing, and creating an intermediate gold doré product. Nonetheless, equal effort should be extended to the final handling and processing of th

    Jan 1, 2018

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - Abstract of a Paper on the Mines and Works of the Lehigh Zinc Company

    By H. S. Drinker

    THE first discovery of zinc 011 the property now worked by this company was made by the celebrated mineralogist, Prof. William Theodore Rapper, in 1845. Different claimants kept the property in contin

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - Preliminary Report of the Committee upon the Waste of Anthracite Coal

    By Eckley B. Coxe

    At the first meeting of the Institute, a paper was read by Mr. Rothwell, calling attention to the importance of at once considering the great waste of anthracite coal under the present system of mini

  • CIM
    Bethlehem Mines Corporation’s Marmora Mine

    By H. O. Olsen

    "GeneralTHE IRON ORE at Marmora is a replacement deposit of Precambrian limestone and is overlain with Palaeozoic limestone. It is a low-grade magnetite deposit and the ore will require concentration

    Jan 1, 1955

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - A Reference-Scheme for Mine-Workings

    By Wilbur E. Sanders

    At some period during the operation of metalliferous and other commercially valuable mineral-deposits in connection with their underground mining, when the developments therein have become so extensiv

    Jan 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - A Sectional Hanging-Pipe Hot-Blast Oven

    By Arthur F. Wendt

    The hot-blast oven of which the accompanying plate gives complete details, was designed by the writer for the spiegel-furnace of the Lehigh Zinc and Iron Co., at Bethlehem, Pa. Members of the Institut

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - Colorimetric Estimation of Manganese in Steel

    By Byron W. Cheever

    In my paper on the estimation of manganese, etc., presented at the Halifax meeting, in September, 1885 (Transactions, xiv., 372), I said that the colorimetric process "can never be made to give reliab

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - Cost-Accounts of Gold-Mining Operations

    By Thomas H. Sheldon

    In the zeal for opening up new ore-bodies, or for extracting the ore from attractive bodies already opened up, we very often lose sight of the fact, that, after all, the operation of a mine is a busin

    Jan 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - Piping in Steel Ingots

    By N. Lilienberg

    During the past fen- years, the requirements for steel have been raised so high that soundness is more important than ever before. The old practice mas to make steel ingots of suffciently large sectio

    Jan 1, 1907

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - The Action of Dilute Acids on Certain Varieties of Fused Suiphide of Iron

    By Edward Hart

    Having occasion several years since to make ferrous sulphide, I attempted to do so by fusing a mixture of coal-brasses (FeS2) and dried ferrous sulphate. A very nice-looking sulphide was obtained; but

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - The Ancient Copper-Mines of Lake Superior

    By Alvinus Brown Wood

    The ancient copper-mines of Lake Superior, having been destroyed or covered by modern mining-dumps, are not accessible to the present inhabitants of that region, and, since no more are likely to be fo

    Jan 1, 1907

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - The Ives Process of Photo-Mechanical Engraving, and its Usefulness to Engineers

    By R. W. Raymond

    The various modifications of the art of photography have become within the last few years the indispensable allies of every art and science. But, before the introduction of the process which is the su

    Jan 1, 1887

  • AIME
    Bethlehem Paper - The Kurzwernhart Gas-Saving Process

    By Joseph Hartshorne

    Ever since the introduction of the Siemens regenerative furnace, it has been recognized that a certain amount of gas is lost each time the furnace-action is reversed. This loss comes, first, from the

    Jan 1, 1907