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Bulletin 17 A Primer On Explosives For Coal MinersBy Clarence Hall, CHARLES F. MUNROE
Of the common causes of the larger mine accidents, such as falls of roof and coal, gas and dust explosions, mine fires, and the misuse of explosives, all of which are often closely related, each must
Jan 1, 1911
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Performance Monitoring Of Block Cave Mines Using Signal Processing And Waveform Analysis Of Gps DataBy D. Rutledge
Discrete (digital) signal processing techniques are proving to be very valuable tools for miners using the block cave method. Waveform analysis of different measured signals associated with active mi
Jan 1, 2008
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Economics of the Mineral Industry - The Influence of the Minerals Industry on General EconomicsBy James Boyd
Scientists and engineers must concern themselves not only with technical problems, but with the socio-economic difficulties of our scciety. The author states that raw materials are basic to the econom
Jan 1, 1968
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Bulletin 117 Structure in Paleozoic Bituminous CoalsBy Reinhardt Thiessen
Views and conceptions of the origin, composition, and general nature of coal differ so widely that to determine the real extent of actual knowledge is no easy matter. The chemist finds difficulty in a
Jan 1, 1920
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A Laboratory Study Of The Fracturing Of Rocks By Hydraulic PressureBy A. V. Pegler
As with most rheologically defined materials, rocks react differently in different environments to similar forces. Physical changes and deformations depend as much on the rate of change of stress as t
Jan 1, 1968
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Co-Simulation in Hydromet Process DesignBy Lanre Oshinowo
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is used in conjunction with process modelling at HATCH to achieve a superior level of confidence in the process design of hydrometallurgical process plants. The use
Jan 1, 2004
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Agglomeration of Sulphide MineralsBy J. A. Finch, J. Vergouw
"Flotation selectivity becomes progressively more difficult to achieve with decreasing particle size. One of the possible problems is agglomeration, i.e. particles clustering together. One mechanism d
Jan 1, 1997
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Connecting Railway Lines In Vienna With Underground Structures - SynopsisBy Rüdiger Wunsch
The new high speed Vienna - St.Pölten line and the Lainzer tunnel are to be connected to the existing Western railway line in Vienna. This involves building an underground cut and cover branching tunn
Jan 1, 2000
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The Application of Hydroviscous and AC Induction Brakes on a Long Regenerative Panel ConveyorBy Joe Maloney, Steve Shadow
Mining conditions at Cyprus Amax's Twentymile Coal Company (TCC) require the use of regenerative conveyors. Regenerative conveyors were first used in the Southwest Mine District and then in the c
Jan 1, 1998
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Design of Copper-Cobalt Hydrometallurgical CircuitsCopper-Cobalt hydrometallurgy has seen a resurgence in recent years with the development of projects in Zambia and the DRC. Many of the flow sheets are unique in their use of hydrometallurgical techni
Jan 1, 2008
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Spatial trends in rock strength – can they be determined from coreholes?By Deno Pappas, Chrisropher Mark, John Rusnak, Linda McWilliams
Mine planning for a new reserve is based on information obtained from exploratory coreholes. A critical component of an exploration program is the geotechnical evaluation. Poor assumptions about roo
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Thermal Fatigue in Rocks- La Roque-Gageac' Case StudyBy D. Virely, M. Gasc-Barbier, J. Guittard
"The valleys of the Dordogne and the Vézère (France) have been inhabited since prehistoric times, as evidenced by the famous site of Lascaux. A few miles away, the village of La Roque-Gageac is also a
Jan 1, 2015
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History Of Pumping At The Chief Consolidated Mine, Eureka, Juab County, UtahBy John G. Hall
The pumping operations at the Chief mine have been unique in the respect that for many years the entire flow of water into the mine has been disposed of by pumping into natural underground " caverns"
Jan 1, 1949
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Roasting tn the Iron and Steel IndustryBy H. U. Ross
ROASTING is usually thought of as a process in which finely crushed or ground ore is heated with air in a suitable furnace in which the ore is rabbled or agitated in such a way as to insure complete r
Jan 1, 1961
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Detrital Gold in North WestlandDetrital gold in the Greymouth-Hokitika area has been won from: (a) gravel of the Pliocene Old Man Group, (b) glacial outwash gravel of Middle and Late Quaternary age, (c) raised shoreline deposits of
Jan 1, 1996
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India's Gigantic TaskBy K. L. Sehgal
Minerals are the basis of modern civilization: their exploitation and effective utilization are a yard- stick for measuring the comparative prosperity of different nations. This is particularly true i
Jan 9, 1965
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A Challenge to Petroleum EngineersBy D. R. Knowlton
IF I were a minister, and this were a sermon, and such a passage appeared in the Bible, I would choose for my text: "From whence cometh the oil for our war?" And no preacher was ever more serious than
Jan 1, 1943
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A Practical Approach for Blasters to Determin The Optimal Bench Blasting ConditionsBy Gungor Tuncer, Ali Kahriman, Abdulkadir Karadogan
In the bench blasting, the realisation of an economic, and safe blasting is only possible with a reliable blasting design on condition that considering all sequential activities such as drillingblasti
Jan 1, 2004
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Applied Seismic Monitoring for Decision Making in Deep Hard Rock Mines - RASIM 2022By Brad Simser
Several case histories from Glencore’s Sudbury Operations show how passive seismic monitoring data is used for geotechnical decision making. The data comes from three different seismic arrays monitori
Apr 26, 2022
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Radioactive Tracers in FlotationBy A. M. Gsudin, F. W. Bloecher, C. S. Chan-s, P. L. De Bruyn
M ANY elements can now be obtained in radioactive form. The radioisotopes have the same chemical properties as the corresponding inactive forms, differing from them only by their nuclear instability.
Jan 1, 1948