Search Documents

Sort by

  • AIME
    Determination Of The Instantaneous Shut In Pressure From Hydraulic Fracturing Data And Its Reliability As A Measure Of The Minimum Principal Stress.

    By J. Mark Gronseth

    The instantaneous shut in pressure often times is not a well defined feature of pressure-time records from in situ stress determinations by hydraulic fracturing. As the applications of in situ stress

    Jan 1, 1982

  • SME
    An Operations Research Approach To The Equipment Replacement Problem ? Introduction

    By Hubert E. Sherer

    The mining industry is presently one of the most heavily capitalized industries in the U.S. (U.S. - Statistical Abstracts, 1979). U.S. sales of new mining equipment (not including environmental, prepa

    Jan 1, 1982

  • TMS
    Are Zeolites Dimensionally Equivalent to Asbestos?

    By K. B. Shedd

    Questions regarding possible adverse health effects from exposure to zeolites arose when the inhabitants of two villages in Turkey were found to have high incidences of mesothelioma, a disease general

    Jan 1, 1982

  • CIM
    Introduction to technology transfer - Universities to industry

    By John C. McKay

    "The five papers which follow, under the heading of ""Technology Transfer-Universities to Industry"", were originally presented at the 20th Annual CIM Conference of Metallurgists in Hamilton, Ontario.

    Jan 1, 1982

  • NIOSH
    Mineral Highlights - Law Of The Sea Treaty

    After nine years of negotiations, the U.N. Conference on the Law of the Sea approved a Law of the Sea Treaty text in April. Israel, Turkey, the United States and Venezuela voted against the text and 1

    Jan 1, 1982

  • NIOSH
    IC 8889 Manganese Availability - Domestic - A Minerals Availability System Appraisal

    By Catherine C. Kilgore

    The Bureau of Mines investigated the availability of manganese from known domestic occurrences. Eight of these deposits were found to have demonstrated resources totaling 420 million metric tons with

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Types And Characteristics Of Common Grinding Circuit Flow Sheets

    By Robert Craig, Earl L. Rau

    Introduction Grinding circuits are used to reduce the particle size of ores to the size desired for beneficiation or to grind a concentrate to a size required for final marketing. Grinding and clas

    Jan 1, 1982

  • SME
    Cost Estimation for Sublevel Stoping-A Case Study *

    By A. J. Richardson

    Before the development of the underground stoping and mining costs can be considered, certain facts about the ore body, the proposed mine, markets, etc., must be known or determined. In the case to

    Jan 1, 1982

  • SME
    Empirical and Analytic Approaches to Subsidence Prediction

    By D. E. Munson, H. J. Sutherland

    Empirical methods for describing the shape of the subsidence trough over coal mines in Europe are tested against field measurements of subsidence over longwall panels in the United States. The graphic

    Jan 1, 1982

  • TMS
    Separation of Arsenic from Nickel

    By A. S. Block-Bolten

    Two innovations in nickel-arsenic separation have been studied on a laboratory scale. The first requires only a nitric acid atmospheric leach without preliminary roasting and leads to favorable final

    Jan 1, 1982

  • NIOSH
    OFR-60-84 Performance Criteria Guideline For Three Explosion Protection Methods Of Electrical Equipment Rated Up To 15,000 Volts AC

    By Larry Joe Linley

    The Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines is reviewing explosion protection methods for use in gassy coal mines. This performance criteria guideline is an evaluation of three explosion protectio

    Jan 1, 1982

  • NIOSH
    OFR-127-85 Through-The-Earth Electromagnetic Trapped Miner Location Systems. A Review (0167947a-011e-41eb-b37b-cd1aaf8b20c4)

    By Walter E. Pittman

    In its role of providing technical assistance to the mining industry, the Bureau of Mines' Tuscaloosa Research Center has conducted research to develop trapped miner location systems which would

    Jan 1, 1982

  • TMS
    Recollections of Industrial Applications of Mineralogy

    By G. C. Amstutz

    The topic of the industrial applications of mineralogy is a vast field which can be adequately covered only in a large book or by a two or three semester course. This paper recalls experiences of the

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Developing A Simulator For Ball Mill Scale-Up - A Case Study

    By J. A. Herbst, K. Rajamani

    INTRODUCTION Recent research has shown that popu- lation balance models hold considerabl e promise as a basis for accurate mill scale-up from laboratory batch grinding tests. It has been shown tha

    Jan 1, 1982

  • SAIMM
    Personeelbestuur in die mynboubedryf

    By F. S. A. de Frey, F. C. Kruger

    Personnel management has undergone a remarkable change over the course of the past ten years. Personnel departments have played an increasingly important role, which today requires highly trained peop

    Jan 1, 1982

  • CIM
    A practical solution to cable bolting problems at the Tsumeb Mine

    By W. H. Stheeman

    "The high rock pressures at the deeper levels of the Tsumeb Mine have necessitated the changing of the mining methods and the introduction of cable bolts. After two rockfalls in the cable-bolted stope

    Jan 1, 1982

  • SME
    A New Source Of Energy For Texas - Western Coal

    By A. E. Michon

    I am Alfred E. Michon, Vice President- International for Burlington Northern Inc. I work for BN's holding company and my responsibilities include co-ordinating the activities of our eight subsidi

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Diesel Vs. Electric Haulage

    By J. W. Smith

    Our continuous search for underground productivity improvements has been brought about by the diminishing ore grades in existing underground mines. The need for more efficient mining methods is a resu

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AUSIMM
    Mechanical Agitation in the Carbon-in-Pulp Process

    By McDonough RJ

    Mechanical agitation is the preferred system for Carbon-in-Pulp processes. Agitator design requires an understanding of the relationships between energy, shear and flow and the nature of shear rates

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Shaft Sinking Today - A Boring Business Tomorrow

    By Maurice Grieves

    The great majority of shafts constructed today are still excavated by drilling and blasting, a method which changed very little in over 100 years until the introduction of the mechanical lashing unit

    Jan 1, 1982