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  • AIME
    Muddling Through the Energy Crisis

    By John V. Beall

    Many Americans will judge the energy crisis by the picture shrink on their TV screen. And they are right to make this assessment considering the large areas of the country with marginal generating cap

    Jan 10, 1972

  • NIOSH
    The Mineral Industries Of Africa

    A concise country-by-country summary of the mineral industry of Africa is presented. Reserves, resources, role of the country in the world mineral supply, and developments in the mineral industries ar

    Jan 1, 1976

  • AUSIMM
    The Thalanga Massive Sulphide Deposit

    By Hartley JS, Wills KJA

    The Thalanga massive sulphide deposit is hosted by Upper Cambrian rhyolites and volcaniclastics of the Mt. Windsor Volcanics near their contact with overlying dacites, rhyolites and sediments of t

    Jan 1, 1987

  • SME
    Innovation in the Copper Industry

    By G. A. Eltringham

    Mining and extraction methods in the copper industry use basic technologies developed over a period of almost 150 years. Paradigm shifts in the industry have been rare, yet human involvement in the ac

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SME
    Eastern Europe -The Challenge Ahead

    By J. B. Griffiths

    Clearly there is a tremendous need for assistance in Eastern Europe since most industries must undergo major restructuring. The new governments face many dilemmas, the first task being to establish an

    Jan 1, 1992

  • AIME
    The Moffat Tunnel in Colorado

    By AIME AIME

    DREAMS do come true at times, although it is evidently better to believe in engineers than to "believe in fairies" if most dreams are to be translated into fact. It was a fine dream that David H. Moff

    Jan 1, 1925

  • AIME
    The Big Hole Gets Bigger

    By James H. Allen

    The development of large diameter rotary drilling techniques and equipment in the last nine years has been the main factor for the rapid advancement made by this method of shaft construction. In 1959,

    Jan 11, 1968

  • AIME
    Fluorspar-The Domestic Supply Situation

    By Wm. I. Weisman, C. W. Tandy

    Consumption of fluorspar in the United States in the last ten years has doubled to 1.34 million tons. One main, reason for the increase has been the use of the basic oxygen furnace to produce steel wh

    Jan 1, 1975

  • AIME
    The New Position of Tin

    By Bruce W. Gonser

    TIN is not yet classed as a rare metal, but it has taken a long stride in that direction in the last ten months. It is now in Group 1 of the War Production Board's critical list, along with such

    Jan 1, 1942

  • AIME
    The Physical Chemistry Of Hydrometallurgy

    By E. Peters

    As in other fields of Extractive Metallurgy, Hydrometallurgy is preoccupied with separation processes and with oxidation-reduction processes. The physical chemistry of each type of process can be desc

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    Recent Progress in the Nonmetallics

    By Oliver Bowles

    STRIKING new developments in the field of industrial minerals include the employment of lime, salt, coal, and air for the manufacture of stockings, and the substitution of paper for granite and marble

    Jan 1, 1940

  • CIM
    Geology of the Adams Mine

    By F. Dubuc

    "The Adams Mine of Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation is situated on the Boston Township iron range near Kirkland Lake, Ontario. Eight different orebodies have been outlined, with a total open-pit cru

    Jan 1, 1966

  • TMS
    The Sonochemical Leaching Of Chalcopyrite

    By Nedam Abed

    A fundamental study of the sonochemical leaching of chalcopyrite in ferric ion media has been performed to understand and quantify the effects of sonication and other parameters on leaching reactions.

    Jan 1, 2003

  • AIME
    Mining Conditions On The Witwatersrand

    By W. L. Honnold

    (San Francisco Meeting, September, 1915) OWING to a unique labor situation and other unusual circumstances, the mining methods of the Rand are hardly comparable with practice elsewhere. They are&apos

    Jan 8, 1915

  • ISEE
    The Waiting Time Recovery Test

    By John T. Aler

    The U.S. Bureau of Mines has been studying the problem of why explosives detonate weakly or misfire during blasting in underground coal mines. Cross-borehole shock wave interaction has been identified

    Jan 1, 1991

  • SME
    Urban Costs: The Contractor's Viewpoint

    By Patrick B. Kenny

    Generally speaking, it is safe to address this conference as a conclave of Engineers, Owners' Agents, Governmental Representatives, and Contractors. As a group, we have assembled here to learn of

    Jan 1, 1979

  • CIM
    Metallogeny of the Canadian Cordillera

    By A. Panteleyev, C. S. Ney, R. J. Cathro, A. Sutherland Brown

    The general distribution of metal deposits in the Canadian Cordillera can be related to its tectonic evolution. The Canadian Cordillera is naturally divisible into five longitudinal tectonic belts wit

    Jan 1, 1971

  • AIME
    The Engineer in Public Life

    By John Hays Hammond

    IT was but a few years ago that the mining engineer, and his confreres, the civil, mechanical and electrical engineer, were stigmatized by politicians of the parish? pump variety as advance agents of

    Jan 1, 1929

  • AIME
    The Things That Are Caesar's

    By Horace V. Winchell

    PERHAPS the matter of greatest interest to all mining men at the present time is the question of income and excess profits taxes on mines. Every producing mine in the United States is called upon to r

    Jan 1, 1920

  • TMS
    The Solubility of Metal Phosphates

    By R. G. Robins

    Metal separations based on the selective precipitation of phosphates have a potential application in many hydrometallurgical processes. This paper reviews the literature on the solubility of a number

    Jan 1, 1991