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  • SME
    Longest Underground Belt Haulage System

    By W. G. Kegel

    Coal mining today is confronted with numerous problems, all of which affect in some way the ability of the operator to produce profitably. The major endeavor, therefore, is a quest for cost lowering t

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Development & Application Of Manufactured Diamond

    By H. B. Weaver

    The development of a method to manufacture diamonds has been rated as one of the out- standing scientific achievements of our time. The story is both interesting and significant. This paper will q

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Preliminary Considerations For Longwall Mining ? Introduction

    By George R. Huebner

    The White Pine Copper Company, subsidiary of Copper Range Company, is located in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The offices, plant, and mine are six miles south of Lake Superior in Ontonagon County.

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Evolution Of Wollastonite As Industrial Mineral ? [History]

    By Lauren W. Choate

    Wollastonite, a calcium metasilicate, derives its name from the man who discovered the mineral, Doctor William H. Wollaston, an English scientist. OCCURENCE Occurences of the mineral have been n

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Exploration Of 100,000 Acres Of Coal Land

    By Douglas F. Crickmer

    Pocahontas Land Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Norfolk and western Railway Company, owns a 100,000-acre block of coal lands in Martin, Johnson, Pike, Floyd and Lawrence Counties, Kentucky.

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    The Occurrence Model Of Mineral Wealth

    By DeVerle Harris

    The enthusiasm with which individuals have participated in mineral exploration in the development of this country testifies to the fact that there was once a very real probability of making a worthwhi

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Water Mining - A Modern Reality

    By William C. Ellis

    Underground water is part of a continuing hydrologic cycle, which involves all elements of water occurrence. All groundwater of economic importance is in process of movement through a porous rock stra

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    The Hot-Stage Microscope: An Important Tool For Chemical-Metallurgical Research At Elevated Temperatures ? Introduction

    By A. R. Conroy

    Microscopic observation of physical and chemical changes which take place in various materials under conditions of elevated temperature and controlled atmosphere can often yield valuable insight into

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    The Use Of Aerial Photography In The Exploration For Industrial Minerals

    By Kalman N. Isaacs

    Aerial photography is a recognized and integral part of the search for petroleum and for the metallic ores, but its application lags seriously; in the search for the industrial minerals This is, in al

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Underground Disposal Of Industrial Wastes In Louisiana

    By B. S. Graves

    Deep well disposal of selected industrial wastes has been proved feasible and acceptable in the New Orleans area by several industries including Shell Oil Company's Norco Refinery and Chemical Pl

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Characteristic Effects Of Contained Nuclear Explosions For Evaluation Of Mining Applications

    By Charles R. Boardman

    Recent underground nuclear tests in tuff, alluvium, salt, and granite have yielded data essential to the evaluation of mining applications of contained nuclear detonations. The data indicate that for

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Ply Ash, Properties and Beneficiation Methods

    By H. L. Lovell

    The growing production of fly ash with the many attendant problems of economics, disposal and potential uses suggests an urgent need to consider those properties which are basic in its beneficiation.

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Deep Leg Flotation Cell

    By C. A. Hollingsworth

    The Deep Leg Flotation Cell was developed to solve a problem which confronted the Smith-Douglass Company on moving from one mining area to another. Poor recovery and, to some extent, inferior concentr

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Beneficiation Of Mining Machines At The Ireland Mine By Design Changes

    By Evan Adams

    The Ireland Mine is located some seven miles South of Moundsville West Virginia, along the bank of the Ohio River. We are mining the Pittsburgh #8 seam. This seam is approximately 60" in thickness, an

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Panel Discussion: Air Pollution Control As It Affects The Coal Industry

    The use of coal as a fuel causes air, pollution in; a number of different forms, and in nearly all stages of its, handling, preparation, storage, use and-disposal of its residue. First let us consi

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Exploration, Planning And Design For A Coal Mine Development In The Southern Illinois Field - Introduction:

    By C. C. Bailie

    This paper will be concerned with those mineable coal measures at depths necessitating deep mine operations in the range of 200 feet to 800 feet in depth. The area is generally classified as the South

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Canadian Minerals In National And International Perspective

    By R. B. Toombs

    In describing the Canadian mineral industry in a world setting, this paper examines the industry from four points of view. First, mineral industry growth is related to trends in economic activity ther

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Economics Of Fluorine Raw Materials

    By J. K. Brooke

    Fluorine is a lively element in both its chemical and economic behavior. It was not isolated as an element until 1886 by Moissan. However, its principal source to this day, fluorspar, was known and it

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    A Carbon Monoxide Reduction-Disintegration Test For Iron Ores And Agglomerates ? Summary

    By R. A. Limons

    Natural ores, sinters, and pellets were subjected to a carbon monoxide reduction-disintegration test under laboratory conditions including a simulated blast furnace gas and a 1000°F temperature. The m

    Jan 1, 1964

  • SME
    Surface Properties of Hydrophobic Solids ? Introduction

    By N. Arbiter

    If two fluid phases are brought into contact with a solid, one fluid may completely wet the surface to the exclusion of the other, or both may wet it, forming a three-phase line of contact. These rela

    Jan 1, 1964