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  • SME
    Mine Planning Software Models Empire Mine Ore

    By Allan E. Koski

    Ceveland-Cliffs uses a specialized software package in mine planning at the Empire Mine, an iron ore mine it manages on Michigan’s Marquette Iron Range. The application puts together years of mining

    Jan 1, 2000

  • AIME
    Mine Planning Succeeds On A Dedicated Computer

    By P. J. Clifford, A. B. Brown

    The development of computerised mine planning has been hindered by the cost of processing the large data bases associated with mineral deposits and the inherent inconvenience of performing an interact

    Jan 1, 1983

  • SME
    Mine Planning Using Apple's Macintosh - Overview Of Applications Software And Planning Techniques

    By Thomas Novak, Philip Johnson, Richard L. Sanford, Lloyd A. Morley

    Macintosh use in mine-planning applications lags DOS machines since many users have made significant investments in hardware and training for other environments. Macintosh use is becoming more pronoun

    Jan 1, 1993

  • CIM
    Mine Plant - From Conception to Production

    By J. B. Mitchell

    Many of the pre-production and plant startup problems that we regard as inevitable are actually caused by poor organizational methods. Traditional methods of organization can be modified to provide cl

    Jan 1, 1966

  • CIM
    Mine plant engineering industry/education review

    By D. H. Wilson

    "This paper examines the increasing need for mechanical-electrical people within the industry and some of the reasons why such a shortfall exists. It is suggested that, in part, it is image related. T

    Jan 1, 1981

  • SME
    Mine Power Systems

    By Christopher J. Bise

    INTRODUCTION A mine's power system represents the driving force behind all of the extraction and auxiliary operations, because the production and transportation of mined material and the oper

    Jan 1, 1986

  • SME
    Mine Preplanning

    By Christopher J. Bise

    INTRODUCTION Before a mine is planned in detail, a preliminary analysis is often conducted. This preplanning permits the mining engineer to make a rapid assessment as to whether or not a particula

    Jan 1, 1986

  • AUSIMM
    Mine productivity and equipment selection impacts with operational grade engineering

    By A F. von Wielligh, M Scott, L Keeney

    Operational Grade Engineering (GE) is the early (pre-processing) discard of low-grade mineralised and/or barren rock to improve the ore grade and/or reduce deleterious elements within the run of mine

    Nov 10, 2020

  • CIM
    Mine reconciliation ? for better or worse!

    By Rayleen Riske

    Why do we look for better reconciliation when times get tough? Why wait? Mine reconciliation should be a priority throughout the good times too. In fact, with good reconciliation, those good times are

    May 1, 2010

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Rehabilitation for Sustainable Landcare: Cost-Effective Strategies

    By R Simcock

    Why Rehabilitate? Legislative Requirement Land rehabilitation is a condition of resource consents for mining. Clause 17 (1) of the Resource Management Act 1991 (duty to avoid, remedy, or mitigate adve

    Jan 1, 1997

  • SME
    Mine Roof Truss Support Systems Technology

    By R. M. Cox

    The ground forces generated by a properly installed and tensioned mine roof truss assembly can provide permanent mine roof support, even in severe ground conditions, either by direct suspension of the

    Jan 1, 2002

  • SME
    Mine Safety Applications Of A Geographic Information System

    By S. E. Phillipson

    The Mine Safety and Health Administration?s (MSHA) Roof Control Division (RCD) collects a variety of geological and engineering information pertaining to mining conditions in surface and underground m

    Jan 1, 2008

  • SAIMM
    Mine Safety Net Development And Applications - Synopsis

    By N. M. Skarbøvig

    Safety nets have been used selectively in several South African mines over the years. Recently, however, an increased emphasis on mine safety has seen a resurgence of their utilization underground. Th

    Jan 1, 2011

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Sampling Methods and Records in Use at Triton Gold Mines, N.L., Western Australia

    By Sharpe E. J

    The Triton lode is a schistose feldspar biotite chlorite rock with quartz, carbonate, pyrite and some pyrrhotite. Its more chloritic sections strongly resemble the enclosing greenstones, its more feld

    Jan 1, 1938

  • SME
    Mine Seismicity and The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty

    Many mining operations generate seismic signals. They come from blasting and from underground mine failures such as rockbursts, longwall first caves, coal bumps and pillar collapses. Traditionally,

    Jan 1, 2000

  • SAIMM
    Mine seismicity: prediction or forecasting? - Synopsis

    By S. M. Spottiswoode

    Much as one hopes to predict whether damaging seismicity might occur somewhere in the next shift, this is not possible at present. Recently, an analysis of seismicity at two mines has shown that a sma

    Jan 1, 2010

  • NIOSH
    Mine Shaft Conveyance Monitoring

    By T. M. Ruff, W. G. McCoy, M. J. Beus, S. Iverson, W. Hasz

    Technology to enhance safety during mine hoisting has been developed by researchers at the Spokane Research Laboratory of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Assessment of curre

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Shafts – Planning, Optimising and Constructing

    By D J. Kilkenny

    Work practices involved in shaft construction can be aligned with current industry standard operating practices. However, the working environment during conventional shaft construction introduces uniq

    Mar 21, 2011

  • SME-ICGCM
    Mine Stability Evaluation From Microseismic Activity (5cc6a13d-fd4e-4c74-a7d1-2213b7f2a1da)

    By Brian R. A. Wood

    Any defect activity resulting from an applied stimulus on a structure will generate a stress wave which travels in the medium under the laws of acoustics, thus the name of acoustic emission (AE). AE t

    Jan 1, 1992

  • SME-ICGCM
    Mine Stability Mapping

    By Collin L. Stewart

    The high cost and limited flexibility of modern longwall systems has resulted in the need for mine engineers and geologists to predict possible adverse mining areas ahead of mining and to then design

    Jan 1, 2006