The Porphyry Coppers - An Achievement Of Engineers

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 18
- File Size:
- 605 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1933
Abstract
OBSERVERS in more than negligible number appear to believe that the achievements of engineers during the last generation have been an affliction rather than a blessing to society. Quite accurately they perceive that scientific progress and technologic advance have reduced to a fraction-often a small fraction-the amount of manual effort required to accomplish a given unit of useful work. They have seen men, as a consequence, deprived of employment in a particular industry; and this so-called technological unemployment they have denounced as inimical to the workers and consequently to the whole social order in progressive nations. To those who subscribe to this thesis the story of the Porphyry Coppers may not make palatable reading, for it is an amazing record of engineering and technologic achievement. But to those others who take the longer and broader view that economic and social progress cannot enduringly lag far behind advance in the realm of science and engineering; and that any improvement in the means and method of doing essential things eventually must make the world a better place in which to live; to these the record of the development of these great mines can- not but be a source of delight. It is an outstanding example of the advantages of mass production coupled with the fruits of scientific research and inventive genius. More, it reflects the pioneer spirit, the initiative, the self-reliance, the independence of thought and action that are traditional with the mining engineer. The word porphyry is a geologic term, the significance of which will be elaborated in later chapters. The essential characteristics of the deposits that are universally, if not quite
Citation
APA: (1933) The Porphyry Coppers - An Achievement Of Engineers
MLA: The Porphyry Coppers - An Achievement Of Engineers. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1933.