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Fluid Inclusion and Stable Isotope Study of the Buffalo Gold Deposit, Red Lake Greenstone Belt, Northwestern Ontario, CanadaBy G. Chi, A. Solomon, J. Lai
"The Buffalo gold deposit is a small deposit consisting of auriferous quartz-tourmaline veins within a granodiorite stock in the Red Lake greenstone belt. This study aims to characterize the mineraliz
Jan 1, 2009
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Fluidized Bed Applications for the Minerals Industry and Renewable EnergyBy Joerg Hammerschmidt, Marcus Runkel, Andreas Wirtz, Kent Pope
"Fluidized bed reactor systems in the minerals industry have been progressively developed and widely implemented over a period of more than sixty years for a multitude of process applications. Their v
Jan 1, 2014
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Fluo-Solids Roasting of Arsenopyrite Concentrates at Cochenour WillansBy Owen Matthews
Introduction For the past year and a half, the mill of Cochenour Willans Gold Mines, Limited, McKenzie Island, Ontario has been roasting arsenopyrite-gold concentrates, prior to cyanidation, by mea
Jan 1, 1949
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Fluorine Consumption Trends Of The Aluminum Industry ? IntroductionBy H. G. Wickes
Virtually all fluorine consumed by the aluminum industry is as the electrolyte of the Hall-Heroult process for producing primary aluminum. A small amount of fluorspar is used but most fluorine is cons
Jan 1, 1973
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Fluorine MicasBy Haskiel R. Shell
While the original purpose of the Bureau of Mines work on fluorine micas was to synthesize large single crystals or film suitable to replace natural muscovite or phlogopite, the objective was broadene
Jan 1, 1969
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Fluorspar -Flux to FluorocarbonBy C. M. Bartley
Fluorspar, in addition to its familiar uses as a metallurgical flux and as a source of the electrolyte for aluminum production, has become important as an essential raw material in the rapidly growing
Jan 1, 1962
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Fluorspar and Its UsesBy E. L. BROKENSHIRE
FLUORSPAR, a little known non-metallic mineral, referred to technically as fluorite, chemically as calcium fluoride, is a compound of calcium and fluorine in the ratio of one molecule of calcium to tw
Jan 1, 1929
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Fluorspar Deposits in Western United StatesBy Ernest Burchard
FLUORSPAR is found in most of the states from the Rocky Mountains westward, and commercial production of the mineral has been reported from Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Washington.
Jan 1, 1933
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Flux Line For Steel Plant Furnaces "Facts & Fancies"By Ernest B. Snyder
The word "line" has been used loosely for many forms of the common steel plant flux. For example, many people use the word "lime" for nigh calcium and dolomitic limestone, for high calcium and dolomit
Jan 1, 1979
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Fly Ash As A Portland Cement Raw MaterialBy William R. Barton
The domestic portland cement industry consumes more than 12 million tons annually of raw materials chemically similar to fly ash. How these materials are used and how fly ash can serve in their place
Jan 1, 1968
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Fly Ash In Production Of Blended CementBy C. E. "Sam" Lovewell
In approaching a discussion of production of cement, I hope I won't be like the porter in the bank who was asked if he could give some details on the rediscount rate. He replied, "Boss, when I sa
Jan 1, 1974
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Flyrock Elimination Program Part 2: Profilers and BoretracksBy Eric Roller, Elliott Giles
All flyrock incidents have the potential to result in injuries or fatalities that can result in loss of company reputation, license to operate with clients, and bear the exposure to high cost liabilit
Jan 1, 2012
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Flyrock Elimination Program Part 3: 3D Bench PhotogrammetryBy Brian Sandhuas, Robert McClure
All flyrock incidents have the potential to result in injuries or fatalities that can result in loss of company reputation, license to operate with clients, and bear the exposure to high cost liabilit
Jan 1, 2012
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Flyrock in surface mining Part II — Causes, sources, and mechanisms of rock projectionBy T. Szendrei, S. Tose
The fracturing and movement of rock that occurs in the vicinity of a stemmed borehole charge in open pit mining operations are described by examining the effects of the emitted stress waves – shock an
Dec 13, 2023
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Flyrock in surface mining – Limitations of current predictive models and a better alterative through modelling the aerodynamics of flyrock trajectoryBy T. Szendrei and S. Tose
Historical approaches to the problem of flyrock based on correlation studies and regression analysis, including artificial neural networks and similar techniques, are inherently incapable of addressin
Dec 13, 2022
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Flyrock in surface mining–Part 3: Shock wave, stress wave, blasthole expansionBy T. Szendrei, S. Tose
The generally accepted view in rock blasting is that the sources of energy for the fracture and movement of rock reside in the shock wave and gas action resulting from the explosion, and yet the mecha
Oct 9, 2024
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Flyrock in surface mining–part 4. Adaptation of Gurney model to predict burden velocity, flyrock velocity, and explosive energy partitioning in benchBy T. Szendrei, S. Tose
The Gurney approach to explosive/inert material interaction was adapted to analyse the face velocity in bench blasting. The model is based on the blasthole diameter, rock and explosive density, burden
Jan 30, 2026
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Flyrock Issues In Blasting (a15d27ae-7280-48e5-8596-7f5474a80521)By T. R. Rehak
Blasting operations are an essential element in the recovery of our Nation?s mineral resources. The mining industry uses billions of pounds of explosives annually. The majority of blasting occurs in
Jan 1, 2000
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Flyrock: A Continuing Blast Safety ThreatBy Harry Verakis
Flyrock is the second leading cause of all blasting related injuries in surface coal, metal and nonmetal mining operations. It is also a primary cause of property damage, monetary losses and “near mis
Jan 1, 2011
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FMC Corporation's North Carolina Phosphate Research ProjectBy Lewis Robert M.
The importance of phosphate in feeding the people of the world has been recognized by mining companies as they continue their search for new ore deposits and ways of improving phosphate production. An
Jan 1, 1975