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Preconcentration Of Native Copper And Porphyry Copper Ores By Electronic SortingBy R. W. Nash, A. E. Schwaneke, V. R. Miller
The Bureau of Mines developed a detector for controlling sorting devices to separate the copper-bearing fragments from the barren portion of Michigan native copper and western prophyry copper ores. A
Jan 8, 1978
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Baltimore February, 1879 Meeting -Jan 1, 1879
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Punctuation (f21533c0-7a01-483d-a332-f533ddb519c1)By T. A. Rickard
A knowledge of the principles of punctuation is essential to effective and intelligible writing, for the ease and pleasure of the reader, and even his understanding, may depend upon the choice and the
Jan 1, 1931
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How Silicosis and Coal Workers' Pneumoconiosis Develop – A Cellular AssessmentBy V. Castranova
"A pneumoconiosis is best defined as the accumulation of dust in the lungs and the tissue's reaction to iu presence. Thus, silicosis is the name given to the fibrotic disease of the lungs caused by in
Nov 1, 1995
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IC 9422 Hazard Recognition In Mining: A Psychological PerspectiveBy Charles W. Perdue
This U.S. Bureau of Mines report considers, from a psychological perspective, the perceptual process by which miners recognize and respond to mining hazards. It proposes that if the hazard recognition
Jan 1, 1995
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Development of ANN‑Based Universal Predictor for Prediction of Blast‑Induced Vibration Indicators and its Performance Comparison - Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration (2021) with Existing Empirical ModelsBy Chiranjibi Santi, Amit Kumar Gorai, VIVEK KUMAR HIMANSHU
Air overpressure (AOp) and peak particle velocity (PPV) are the most undesirable effects of blasting in mines. It is an urgent need to design a predictor model for AOp and PPV for universal applicatio
Jul 30, 2021
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IC 7666 Review Of Literature On Health Hazards Of Metals - I. Copper ? IntroductionBy Sara J. Davenport
The human race has been exposed to copper for thousands of years, as copper and gold were the metals first used by man (1). if According to Ramazzini (2), "of all the metals that man's ingenuity
Jan 1, 1953
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Neural Networks and Their Use In The Prediction of SAG Mill PowerBy Lynn B. Hales, Randy A. Ynchausti
Introduction There continues to be a large economic opportunity associated with improving process performance through advanced process control systems within the minerals industry. The basis for this
Jan 1, 1992
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Reward of Loyalty and LaborBy Charles Schwab
WHEN I leave this life, as an employer of labor there is no one thing that I want so much to be engraven upon my monument as the fact that I have been one of the men who have worked, whether with my b
Jan 12, 1922
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Wallace E. Prattr Director, A.I.M.EBy AIME AIME
TEXAS not only produces millions of barrels of petroleum daily, but supplies the oil industry with an asset infinitely more valuable than liquld gold. That asset is leadership. The oil industry was bu
Jan 1, 1944
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New York Paper - The New Spirit in Industrial Relations (with Discussion)By Herbert M. Wilson
We of the employer class represent labor in the social organization and in industry just as truly as do those who labor only with their hands, and, because our labor is chiefly with our brains, the du
Jan 1, 1919
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Boston Paper - Some Thoughts and Suggestions on Technical Education - Presidential AddressBy T. Egleston
FOR a great part of the progress of the world we are indebted to the works of engineers. It is to them that we owe our means of rapid transportation, our canals, our railroads, our bridges, many of ou
Jan 1, 1888
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Clyde Evarts Weed - Director, AIMEBy Clyde Evarts Weed
SOME one once affirmed his great belief in luck, adding that he had found that the harder he worked the more luck he had. Clyde Weed is a firm believer in this method of courting the fugitive lady. He
Jan 1, 1947
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Preventive Maintenance Of Control Equipment For ExcavatorsBy M. Safiuddin
Within the mining industry, open-pit mining has progressed to a point where a 200-yard walking dragline is as conceivable today as a 35-yard dragline was just a few years ago. This is possible due to
Jan 9, 1967
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Holistic Approach On ?Sustainable Growth? Of Mineral Processing IndustriesBy T. C. Rao
This presentation identifies how mineral (coal included) processing profession should look at the challenges (threats) being faced by mineral industry. Presently, the focus is more on supply and deman
Sep 1, 2012
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RI 4603 Investigation Of The Klondike Fluorspar Deposit, Livingston County, Ky.By A. S. Swanson
In view of the necessity or increasing production of metallurgical fluorspar to satisfy wartime demands, 0, M. Bishop, former district engineer of the Bureau of Mines, L. W. Carrier and. J. S. William
Jan 1, 1949
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Some Problems of TodayBy Thomas A. Edison
We have not yet begun. to realize the possibilities of automatic machinery, in part because we have not developed the designing brains, and in part because we have not sufficiently simplified industry
Jan 1, 1929
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Mineral Industries Education - Postwar Period Brings New Problems - Crowded Schools But Few Graduates for a Few YearsBy E. A. Holbrook
IN my thirty years of educational work in the mineral industries and other engineering fields, this past year has been the most unusual and difficult one. Contact with educators from other schools lea
Jan 1, 1946
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Effect of environmental variables on pitting corrosionBy S. Rajeswari, D. Gopi
"Pitting corrosion inhibition of 304 stainless steel (SS) in groundwater with a ternary inhibitor mixture (phosphonic acid + bivalent cation + various surfactants) was studied with different environme
Jan 1, 2003
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The evolution of advanced guidance techniques for autonomous underground vehiclesBy L. Bloomquist
This paper describes how Automated Mining Systems (AMS) is evolving the state-of-the-art in guidance systems for autonomous underground vehicles. The techniques, trade-offs, and lessons learned from t
Jan 1, 2004