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Bringing Western Coal to Market
By A. Tobey Yu
Despite its inherent low Btu content, western coal's low sulfur content may provide a near-ideal answer to satisfy US goals for clean air and energy self-sufficiency. Vast reserves, amenable to l
Jan 7, 1975
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Extraction Processes for Low-Grade Ores
By James A. Barclay, Ralph C. Kirby
The US minerals posture will be increasingly dominated by three interrelated factors. First, when viewed over the long range, the US supply situation can be expected to steadily deteriorate as demand
Jan 6, 1975
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Pinto Valley Copper Mine – Blueprint for Insured Productivity
By Ta M. Li
Recent start-up of the Pinto Valley mine and mill is expected to add to domestic copper mine capacity by some 62,500 tpy. Owned and operated by Cities Service Co.'s Miami Operations, the complex
Jan 6, 1975
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The Henderson Ore Body – Elements of Discovery, Reflections
By Stewart R. Wallace
Members of the Society, it is a very great honor for me to be here today and to have the opportunity of telling you about some things that have been accumulating in the back of my mind for some time.
Jan 6, 1975
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Underground Mining and Rapid Excavation
By Thomas E. Howard
Recently, the mining community has begun to move toward a more prominent place in the structure of American society. Extensive press coverage of our energy problems during the past year or two has led
Jan 6, 1975
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How the Clean Air Act Clogs Clean Fuels Development
By Ta M. Li
The implementation of the Clean Air Act (CAA) Amendments of 1970 has resulted in a clean fuels deficit that has significant adverse environmental, energy and economic implications, according to the Pr
Jan 5, 1975
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Oil Shale Suffers Setbacks
If world oil prices stabilize at $ll/bbl, if the US decides on the "accelerated supply" case for domestic fuel resources, if investment capital is available, if environmentalists' demand become r
Jan 5, 1975
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The Obstacles to Coal Development
It took the US coal industry 55 years to increase domestic coal production by about 11%-from 568 million tpy in 1920 to today's level of about 630 million tpy. With such a growth record, it would
Jan 5, 1975
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Project Independence: Desirable but Uncertain
By Eugene Guccione
For at least 10 years, various industry people had warned about the alarming decline in the nation's oil and gas reserves. Then, in October 1973, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
Jan 5, 1975
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Oil-Impregnated Sandstone Deposits of Utah
By Jock A. Campbell
Oil-impregnated rocks are known to occur in 22 of the 50 states. The largest known petroleum resources of this type are in Utah, with over 95% of the inventoried total, The Utah deposits are estimated
Jan 5, 1975
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1975-85 Coal Industry’s Capital Requirements
By John F. Frawley
This article in all probability will raise some serious doubts as to whether the coal industry-without a national, long-range commitment to coal-can, or should, attempt to meet the capital demands nec
Jan 5, 1975
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Leading Physicist Recommends Coal and Nuclear Power
By Eugene Guccione
One of the world's most respected scientists, Dr. Hans A. Bethe (see box) has concluded that if anything can solve the energy crisis, it will be coal and uranium. "It is an illusion to think that
Jan 5, 1975
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The Energy Crisis: Whys and Hows
I. THE ENERGY CRISIS STILL EXISTS A. ALTHOUGH IMMEDIATE SHORTAGE IS NOW ALLEVIATED BY: 1. Increased imports through lifting of Arabian embargo; a. Imports were 6.5 million bpd during the week en
Jan 5, 1975
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Prospecting and Exploration Techniques for Ocean Resource Development
Ocean environmental factors are an intriguing new set of parameters to be dealt with in the prospecting and exploration phases of resource development for both the continental margins and the deep oce
Jan 4, 1975
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Deep Ocean Floor Nodule Mining – First Generation Techniques Are Here
Manganese nodules are essentially a surficial resource-there are four times as many nodules on the surface of the deep ocean floor as in the next 3 ft of underlying sediment. Target mine sites in the
Jan 4, 1975
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Processing – No Longer a Problem
By C. Richard Tinsley
As discussed in the economics section of this article, the main processing consideration is whether manganese will be recovered, as this has major implications for reagent consumption. Nodule processi
Jan 4, 1975
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Meeting the Challenge of Material Demands From the Oceans
By C. Richard Tinsley, Ta M. Li
Accelerated development of the deep-ocean and continental margin resources may be the ultimate answer to meet rapidly increasing material demands to the year 2000. The mineral-rich oceans that have be
Jan 4, 1975
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Seventh Annual Offshore Technology Conference Biggest Yet
By Carolyn Barnes
The Offshore Technology Conference, the world's largest technical conference and exhibition on the development of offshore resources and protection of the ocean environment, is sponsored annually
Jan 4, 1975
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Economics of Deep Ocean Resources – A Question of Manganese or No-Manganese
By C. Richard Tinsley
Mineral economists debate whether to call the deep-ocean nodules "manganese nodules," "nickel nodules," "polymetallic nodules," or even "ferro-manganese nodules." It is nickel and copper that are gene
Jan 4, 1975
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Sense and Nonsense in the Law of the Sea
Speech advocating a new law of the sea-the "common heritage of mankind." The 3rd Law of the Sea (L0S) Conference was held in Caracas in mid-1974, and a fourth UN conference, scheduled for mid-March in
Jan 4, 1975