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  • CIM
    Progress in Coal Technology (00a62b26-8f90-40c4-8ab1-1b5ff5a6ce8b)

    By W. A. Lang

    "IntroductionCARBONIZATION, gasification, and chemical utilization of coal are interrelated topics, which makes it difficult to review one without indicating its connection with the others. Hence, in

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Research and the Coal Industry in Canada

    By W. A. Lang

    Introduction That the coal industry has entered a new phase in its development is now evident. Coal, besides being the chief source of heat and power, has become a potential raw material for many i

    Jan 1, 1946

  • CIM
    The Salt Deposits of Malagash, Nova Scotia

    By A. R. Chambers

    Malagash received its name from the Indians many years ago on acco.unt of its turbid (milky) waters, although,' the red men did not appreciate the significance of this turbidity, and were, of cou

    Jan 1, 1924

  • CIM
    Industrial and Fuel Minerals of Manitoba

    By G. M. Hutt

    Introduction The major development of industrial minerals in Manitoba has been in building materials. 'The building-stone industry is developed far beyond the needs of the Province, and the well

    Jan 1, 1934

  • CIM
    Thermal Production of Magnesium

    By L. M. Pidgeon

    Introduction The production of magnesium by direct reduction of the oxide has far passed the experimental stage and was responsible for 30 per cent of the recent wartime production of 246,000 tons

    Jan 1, 1946

  • CIM
    Canada's Future in Copper

    By S. J. Cook

    Copper, a world commodity, and the first metal used by man, played a great part in the beginnings of modern civilization, which rests so dependently on the utilization of metals. Then, long after the

    Jan 1, 1928

  • CIM
    New Construction at Tadanac, British Columbia

    By Unknown

    We are indebted to the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada Limited for the several pictures in this issue showing the progress made in new construction at Tadanac and at Bonnington Fall

    Jan 1, 1925

  • CIM
    The Contact Process for Sulphuric Acid

    By W. H. De Blois

    Introduction In the contact process for ?the manufacture of sulphuric acid, sulphur dioxide gas - produced by the burning of sulphur or of sulphur-bearing ores, or as a by-product in the treatment

    Jan 1, 1927

  • CIM
    Mineral Possibilities of Yukon Territory

    By Aaro E. Aho

    Yukon, one of the most potentially accessible, relatively undeveloped, regions of Canada, has major mineral possibilities. The Klondike placer gold fields and the Mayo silver-lead ?district are the so

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    A Method of Fatigue Testing Drill Rods

    By T. W. Wlodek

    Abstract A simplified method of fatigue testing full-dimension, as-rolled, non-machined, mining drill rods is very desirable to the mining and steel industries in the classification of steels availab

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Industrial Minerals in the National Economy

    By M. F. Goudge

    Introduction It is only fitting on this occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the incorporation of the Institute that we should indulge in a bit of retrospection and review the progress that has

    Jan 1, 1948

  • CIM
    The Production of Reactive Metals

    By L. M. Pidgeon

    "Part I. - PrinciplesIntroductionIf the oxides of the metals are listed in decreasing order of the magnitude of their heats of formation, the list appearing in Table 1 will be formed. It will be appar

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    Aerial Tramway Construction and Operation

    By Dale L. Pitt

    Introduction In opening up a new country, one of the most vital problems is that of transportation Without roads, railways, or water routes, development is very slow because these are the arteries

    Jan 1, 1930

  • CIM
    Site Selection

    By Rob Boom, Yasuyuki Tozaki, Frank M. Wheeler

    Selection of a suitable site for a metallurgical plant is crucial for the success of the business case. For a brownfield project, with the decision to locate the project on a site with existing produc

    Jan 1, 2015

  • CIM
    Caving at Johnson's Asbestos Mine Thetford Mines, Quebec

    By The Staff

    BEFORE going into detail on the subject to be presented, a brief outline of the Company's earl y history would not be out of place. Prospecting and mining on a small scale was started in 1876 on

    Jan 1, 1941

  • CIM
    Session theme: How dead do you want it? Unborn, troublesome or healthy mines: The Economic and Strategic Effects of Mine Closure

    By Philip Peck

    Mine closure issues ?Narrow issues: ?Environmental focus; ?Broad issues: ?Social issues and sustainability; ?Continued importance of mining; ?Historical legacies from closed mines; ?Barriers

    May 1, 2006

  • CIM
    The Changing Canadian Nickel Smelting Landscape - Late 19th Century to Early 21st Century

    By C. M. Diaz, S. W. Marcuson

    In the late 19th century, the discovery of rich nickel-copper sulfide ore bodies in Sudbury and the need for tonnage quantities of the metal to be used in nickel steel armor provided the foundation fo

    Jan 1, 2005

  • CIM
    British Columbia Mineral Survey District No. 3 - And - The Pacific Great Eastern Railway

    By Angus W. Davis

    The case of the P. G. E. railway is a peculiar one. Traversing, as it does, to a large extent, a mineralized country there are as yet no producing mines along its route although I am convinced that mi

    Jan 1, 1925

  • CIM
    The Manufacture and Use of Fine NCN for Secondary Blasting at Cominco's Sullivan Mine

    By H. R. Hammond, E. Sadar

    Cominco is making substantial savings in secondary breaking by replacing dynamite with a new nitrate-based explosive. Compareo with dynamite. the new explosive, known locally as "Fine NCN," is signifi

    Jan 1, 1966

  • CIM
    The Preservation of Mine Timbers

    By George Booth

    In mining operations the cost of timber is an item of much importance, because the life of mine timbers is, in many cases, very short and, as the supply of the better grades becomes depleted, less dur

    Jan 1, 1926