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A New Angle In Shaft SinkingBy J. C. Donnell, O&apos
Sinking an inclined ventilation shaft at the Never Sweat mine of The Anaconda Co. has required a unique underground hoisting arrangement because the shaft changes direction from vertical to 71.5º. Acc
Jan 11, 1965
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A Small Experimental Flotation CellBy Geoffrey Purcell
For anyone contemplating flotation research with only a very limited amount of mineral available for testing, the choice of suitable experimental equipment is by no means obvious. Hallimond's ori
Jan 11, 1965
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Recovery Of Copper By CyanidationBy George W. Lower, Robert B. Booth
The use of cyanides in the extraction of gold and silver is well known1 Such extractions employ concentrations of cyanide in the range of 0.02-0.25% sodium cyanide equivalent in leaching cycles of 24-
Jan 11, 1965
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The U. S. Minerals Attache ProgramBy K. P. Wang, Virgil L. Barr
The U.S. Minerals Attaché Program, similar to the scientific and technical attache programs of other industrialized nations, is designed specifically to keep surveillance on significant worldwide deve
Jan 11, 1965
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Metallized Slurry Blasting At Eagle MountainBy H. M. Conger
Kaiser Steel Corporation's Eagle Mountain mine is located in the Colorado Desert, 60 miles east of Indio, California. Iron concentrates from the mine are shipped by rail 164 miles to the' Co
Jan 11, 1965
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A Position SurveyBy John V. Beall
When the mineral seekers came, they brought romance, excitement and, too often, transitory riches. It has been so for uncounted centuries. While the rich ore lasted, living was high and money flowed-m
Jan 10, 1965
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Mesabi Enters A New EraBy Paul C. Merritt
The story now unfolding on the Mesabi Range is more than just another chapter in the continuing history of iron mining. It is an epic of foresight, research and pioneering instinct just now culminatin
Jan 10, 1965
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Drilling And Blasting At Smallwood MineBy A. Bauer, P. Calder, N. H. Carr, G. R. Harris
Smallwood mine is part of the Iron Ore Company of Canada's Carol Lake operation and is situated in Labrador, 240 miles north of Sept-Iles, Quebec. Last year, 15 million tons of crude ore were cru
Jan 9, 1965
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Karl S. Twitchell - An Interview By Paul C. MerrittMerritt: Karl, you are a native New Englander, having been born in St. Albans, Vermont, in 1885. How did you decide on becoming a mining engineer? Twitchell: While I was attending St. Albans High S
Jan 9, 1965
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Wet Magnetic Separation Of Oxidized SemitaconitesBy J. Hall Carpenter, James E. Lawver
Shortly after the passage of the Taconite Amendment in Minnesota, several mining companies announced their intention to build new magnetite taconite plants and another announced its intention to augme
Jan 9, 1965
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The 1965 Jackling Lecture - Some Problems In Geothermal ExplorationBy Thomas S. Lovering
Hot springs, geysers, steam-emanating fumaroles- these creatures of nature were until recently little more than geological curiosities, but today they are exciting the interest of engineers around the
Jan 9, 1965
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Mining Seams Above Mined-Out Lower SeamsBy Benj. Lazer
Multiple seam mining has been studied and writ- ten about extensively in the past and in the latest review of the subject in 1956 David Stemple covered it exhaustively. The present discussion has to
Jan 9, 1965
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Drilling And Blasting At The Mission MineBy S. C. Fall
The basic aims of the drilling and blasting program at the Mission mine are fourfold: 1. To provide 100,000+ tpd of broken alluvium and rock material for shovel excavation; 2. To obtain fragmenta
Jan 9, 1965
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The Buckingham Method - An Aid In Equipment SelectionBy J. J. Marcus
Mineral industry decision-makers are frequently required to select between competing equipment. Various criteria and methods are currently being used, and this writer would like to suggest a method re
Jan 9, 1965
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Free World Geophysical Expenditures Up 16% In '64By Charles L. Elliot
Data on mining applications of geophysical activity in the Free World in 1964 have been made available to SME again this year by the Society of Exploration Geophysicists. Worldwide data were collected
Jan 9, 1965
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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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Inside Down Under With The Eighth Commonwealth Mining And Metallurgical CongressBy John C. Ludlum
A most stimulating event in the development of world mineral production and technology, the Eighth Commonwealth Mining and Metallurgical Congress was convened at Melbourne Town Hall on March 1 by Sir
Jan 8, 1965
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A Look At Blasting In Highly Fractured RockBy M. J. Coolbaugh
There is a need for concepts and techniques developed specifically for blasting in areas where the rock is loose or highly fractured. Common practice has been to use techniques developed in hard homog
Jan 8, 1965
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Colony Describes A Process For Extracting Shale OilFifty to 75 million years ago, hydrocarbon-bearing rocks were formed in the Green River formation of Colorado, Wyoming and Utah. The hydro- carbons can be extracted from these rocks, marl- stone but m
Jan 8, 1965
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Longwall Mining In The British IslesBy R. H. Foley
It is difficult to consider any seam as unsuitable for longwall mining operation for something like 95% of British coal is produced by this system. The following is a brief report on how they do it-th
Jan 8, 1965