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  • CIM
    Economic Recovery of Uranium from Low-Grade Pulps via Resin-In-Pulp

    By D. Auerswald, M. Kotze, V. Yahorava, T. Udayar

    Uranium can be recovered from lower grade uranium ores (<800 mg/kg U3O8), leach residues, and waste dumps cost-effectively via resin-in-pulp (RIP). Using this technology, no solid/liquid separation or

    Jan 1, 2014

  • AIME
    Economic Relation Of Mining Rate To Grade Of Ore

    By Harry M. Callaway

    IN times of a falling metal market the mine operator attempts to remain in competition by lowering his overall cost and raising the grade of ore he processes. But these adjustments can be made only wi

    Jan 4, 1958

  • AIME
    Economic Rent And Its Relationship To Finance

    By Herbert D. Drechsler

    The objective of this paper is to identify the components of income above that necessary to keep a mine in production and relate those components to the profits of a mining firm. This is a discussion

    Jan 1, 1985

  • SME
    Economic Requirements For Placing Marginal Orebodies Into Production

    By C. L. Pillar

    In the capitalistic system the success of a mining enterprise is measured by the rate of return on the investment and the speed by which its redemption is achieved. Exploration in search of ore deposi

    Jan 1, 1969

  • AIME
    Economic Results of the New Technique in Phosphate Recovery

    By Charles E. Heinrichs

    IN the last decade one of our oldest and largest non-metallic metallic mineral industries has been the subject of persistent technical research, the results of which are another example of the benefit

    Jan 1, 1933

  • AUSIMM
    Economic Returns From Environmental Problems ù Breeding Salt and Stress Tolerant Eucalypts for Carbon Sequestration, Salinity Abatement and Commercial Forestry

    Carbon sequestration in planted forests provides an immediately available, low cost option to address the greenhouse impacts of coal mining and coal utilisation in a carbon constrained world. In addit

    Jan 1, 2005

  • CIM
    Economic Safety

    By A. S. Bayne

    WITH the great increase in the use of power-driven machinery in industry, and consequent large-scale operations, the hazards to which , workmen are exposed have become much more numerous than at the b

    Jan 1, 1938

  • SME
    Economic Sensitivity Analysis Using Geostatistics

    By Rex C. Bryan

    An application of geostatistics to financial decision analysis is the linking of reserve parameters estimation precisions to a mine economics computer program calculating profitability. The estimates

    Jan 1, 1982

  • AIME
    Economic Setting For The World Lead And Zinc Industry

    By E. Mcl. Tittmann

    Deep-seated human instincts urge us to positively mark the passage of time. We celebrate the passage of each year. Years give way to decades, and decades to half centuries and centuries. At all these

    Jan 1, 1970

  • AIME
    Economic Significance Of Cyanid Accumulation In The Blast Furnace

    By Richard Franchot

    From an efficiency viewpoint, the greatest loss of energy to the blast furnace is in its failure to convert more than about a third of the coke carbon from carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide. This resu

    Jan 7, 1925

  • AIME
    Economic Significance of High-Grade Concentrates

    By Paul M. Tyler, Carle R. Hayward

    DOES it pay to do really good work? Quite likely the practical millman will answer that it does not. The preparation of ores for market is primarily a business enterprise, and by and large the individ

    Jan 1, 1936

  • AIME
    Economic Significance Of Recent Technologic Research On Solid Fuels

    By Arno C. Fieldner

    PROBABLY no large industry in the United States is in greater need of technologic research leading to economic improvement than the coal industry. It has suffered severely from increasing substitution

    Jan 7, 1951

  • AUSIMM
    Economic Sustainable Power for Mineral Processing

    Economic Sustainable Power for Mineral Processing

    Sep 13, 2010

  • AIME
    Economic: Factors in the U. S. Phosphate Industry

    By Bedrand L. Johnson

    THE phosphate-rock industry is built upon natural deposits of rocks and minerals in which the element phosphorus is present as a phoshate. The term ?phosphate rock? is a general one, applied to certai

    Jan 1, 1944

  • AUSIMM
    Economical and Environmental Operation of Open Cut Mines

    Mining is a high risk, high capital and potentially high reward undertaking. A large proportion of the risk comes from a lack of definition of the orebody (which also provides some of the potential) a

    Jan 1, 2003

  • SME
    Economical Approach to Engineering Fire Durability of Structures

    By Sean Cassady, Jason Liu, Sanja Zlatanic, Taehyun Moon, Chris Devery

    "For the Hollywood International Airport Runway Expansion Project at Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the structural fire durability analysis was completed for a series of tunnels formed by roadway and railr

    Jan 1, 2016

  • CIM
    Economical Benefits of Autogenous Grinding

    By Seppo Lähteenmäki, Pertti Koivistoinen, Jaakko Levanaho

    "This paper describes the benefits and disadvantages of fully autogenous grinding when compared to grinding with steel grinding media. The study is a real case study based on a low tonnage, high grade

    Jan 1, 2000

  • AIME
    Economical Coal Handling at a South African Colliery

    By C. L. HUNTZINGER

    THE mine here described is in the Witbank district, a coal area of the Transvaal, about 100 miles north- east of Johannesburg. and is owned by the Witbank Colliery, Ltd. The plant has a capacity of 40

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AUSIMM
    Economical Evaluation of Use of Sinter in an Integrated Mini Steel Plant

    By Pfeifer H. C, Nicacio P. A D

    Sinter has been used as part of the metallic charge in large-scale blast furnaces for many years with the well-known benefits in terms of productivity and fuel consumption. However, because of the h

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Economical Manufacture of Quality Lime

    By Victor Azbe

    Introduction Lime enters our daily life in many ways. Our building, chemical, agricultural, sanitary, and industrial endeavours depend on it to such a great extent that it could probably be called

    Jan 1, 1946