Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Shotcrete Methods At Lakeshore Mine Aid Overall Ground Support Program
By Jeremias K. Chitunda
Significant cost savings and improved ground stability are two initial indications from the current wet process shotcrete ground support program at the Lakeshore mine. The area of shotcrete for ground
Jan 12, 1974
-
Bingham's Road Maintenance Program Tackles Mounting Truck Costs
By Roger L. Goin
Maintaining smooth haulage roads is a key to significant cost savings at Kennecott Copper Corp.'s Bing- ham Canyon copper mine, located near Salt Lake City, Utah. The truck operations section of
Jan 12, 1974
-
What's Ahead For Russian Mining?
By G. K. Zaharlev
With a productive output growing at an annual rate of 8%, the Soviet mining industry should emerge as the world's leader in total mineral output during the 1980's. (The Soviet Union's s
Jan 12, 1974
-
The Minerals Depletion Allowance: Its Effect On Future Supply And Financing
By Thomas J. O’Neil
During the past five years, the mining industry has been subjected to new operating constraints that are unprecedented in number, scope, and urgency. The industry must operate in a safer, cleaner mann
Jan 11, 1974
-
How Asarco Liquifies SO2 Off-Gas At Tacoma Smelter
By James M. Henderson, John B. Pfeiffer
The recently completed liquid sulfur dioxide plant at American Smelting and Refining Co.'s Tacoma copper smelter in Washington last April is one step by the firm to meet ambient air quality stand
Jan 11, 1974
-
Application Of Mill Process Controls Can Slash Operating Costs And Improve Mineral Recovery
By Harold W. Smith
Ore beneficiation via grinding and flotation has traditionally been considered an art because, until recently, the beneficiation plants that operated effectively were those run by skillful personnel w
Jan 11, 1974
-
Three New Porphyry Copper Mines For Chile?
By J. David Lowell
For the first time in several years, Chile is again opening its doors to foreign investment. In its new investment code, the Chilean government has announced its willingness to become a partner in joi
Jan 11, 1974
-
Designing The Sacaton Concentrator
By Dennis K. Mortensen
Startup of the 9000 tpd Sacaton concentrator is expected to increase Asarco's domestic copper concentrate capacity by 21%. The plant site is located due west of the mining operations, consisting
Jan 11, 1974
-
New Uses For Bucketwheel Excavators
By T. A. Griffin
Surface mining today is faced with a twin challenge: (1) accelerating the rate of removal of massive quantities of overburden and ore, and (2) replacing comparable high volumes of overburden in the mi
Jan 10, 1974
-
The Minerals Depletion Allowance: Its Importance In Nonferrous Metal Mining
By Thomas J. O’Neil
Once again, the United States Congress is debating the minerals depletion allowance. If the past is any indication, the debate will quickly become politicized. Representatives of the densely populated
Jan 10, 1974
-
Recent Developments In Open Cut Mining And Machines
By William C. Waldbieser
Webster's Third New International Dictionary defines new in part as "having been seen or known but for a short time although perhaps existing before." It has recently become fashionable to talk
Jan 10, 1974
-
A Unique Approach To Get Oil Shale Out Of The Ground
By C. DeWitt Smith
"It just looks like everything is doing fine but humans," wrote Will Rogers fifty years ago. "Animals are having a great year, grass was never higher, flowers were never more in bloom, trees are throw
Jan 10, 1974
-
US Mining Industry Reclaims 80% Of Surface Acreage Used In 1971
The surface area that mining requires is a minuscule fraction of the total land mass of the United States, according to the US Bureau of Mines' latest report "Land Utilization and Reclamation in
Jan 10, 1974
-
Navajo Mine's Goal: To Strip Coal And Reclaim Land At The Same Rate
Now producing 35,000 tpd of coal from a deposit whose estimated reserves total 1.1 billion t, the Navajo mine of Utah International Inc. near Farmington, N. M., is the largest open-pit coal operation
Jan 10, 1974
-
How Design Improvements Boost Walking Draglines' Productivity
By Tegner C. Johnson
Just a few years ago, my company was referred to as the Marion Steam Shovel Company. Though we still make shovels, both two and eight-crawler types, the eight-crawler stripping shovel appears to have
Jan 10, 1974
-
Coal Conversion Processes Loom Big As A Source Of Hydrocarbon Fuels
By Noel F. Boyd
Coal can be liquefied and gasified by several methods, all of which are being investigated and evaluated because each has its own advantages and disadvantages in terms of capital costs, end-products,
Jan 9, 1974
-
Clean Synthetic Fluid Fuels From Coal: Some Prospects And Projections
By Elburt F. Osborn
The phrase "Clean Synthetic Fluid Fuels From Coal," implies that it is possible to obtain adequate and dependable supplies of fuel without sacrificing the quality of our air, water, and land. Because
Jan 9, 1974
-
Lithium Deposits: Their Location And Economic Potential Throughout The World
By E. William Heinrich
With the mounting emphasis on unconventional energy sources, total consumption of lithium minerals will increase significantly in the next decade. The recent development of the lithium battery, for ex
Jan 9, 1974
-
The Seabed Power Struggle
By Robert Poole
On June 20, 1974, delegations representing the governments of 150 nations convened in Caracas, Venezuela. The occasion: the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea. (As this article goes
Jan 9, 1974
-
Who Profits From East-West Trade?
By Eugene Guccione
Before answering the question raised in the title, let's briefly consider how East-West trade is viewed within the entire US political spectrum. Essentially, there are four major schools of thoug
Jan 9, 1974