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Value of Boy Scouts to a Mining CommunityBy H. E. Mills
THE local auditorium of a little Alabama mining town was crowded with expectant men, women and children, as the bulletin board had announced the addition of visiting entertainers to supplement the loc
Jan 2, 1927
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Transporting Ore from Mines to Lower Lake PortsBy W. A. Clark, E. H. Dresser
ORE from the Minnesota iron ranges is transported from the mines to the loading docks on Lake Superior over four different railways: the Great Northern, Northern Pacific, Soo Line, and Duluth, Missabe
Jan 1, 1941
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To Find More Ore, Use Better Exploration TechniquesBy Douglas R. Cook
The urgent need for new base metal ore discoveries was discussed by various authoritative exploration personnel at a CIM symposium on the future of the Canadian mineral industry held at Ottawa in 1967
Jan 7, 1968
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How to Design and Construct Earth Bottom ThickenersBy Frank W. Reinmiller, Edward S. Hsia
Earth bottom thickeners are generally considered to be the lowest cost solution for thickener bottom construction presently available to the mining industry. In addition to the capital cost advantage,
Jan 8, 1977
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Mining - Relationship of Geology to Underground Mining MethodsBy George B. Clark
Many basic engineering principles of all four phases of mining operations, namely, prospecting, exploration, development, and exploitation, can be analyzed better in terms of quantitative geology. Geo
Jan 1, 1955
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Trends In Earnings Of Engineers, 1956 To 1958Earnings of engineers in the period 1956 to 1958 continued the upward trend observed in the previous survey interval, 1953 to 1956. The overall median (all graduates) was $6500 in 1953, $7750 in 1956
Jan 1, 1959
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When Going From Test Data to Mill Design…By Richard H. Ross
A broad definition of' "Mill Design" might cover everything from the first tentative choice of general process to the final structural details for construction. The first phases are mainly concer
Jan 3, 1964
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White Pine Preparing To Use New Transport ConceptGreater automation of facilities is probably the best hope of the mining industry in its efforts to surmount continually rising labor costs. Underground mining, with its inherently low unit labor outp
Jan 7, 1968
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How Management Principles Apply to Health and SafetyThere is a basic need for the health and safety manager to know what work he or she is to do and how to do it in a more professional way. Peter F. Drucker in The Practice of Management said, "The igno
Jan 11, 1979
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General Principles of Chemistry As Applied to MineralsBy William E. Ford, Edward Salisbury Dana
447. Minerals, as regards their chemical constitution, are either the uncombined elements in %native state, or definite compounds of these elements formed in accordance with chemical laws. It is the o
Jan 1, 1922
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How Human Beings Respond to Changing Atmospheric ConditionsBy W. J. McConnell
OBSERVATIONS on man exposed to unusual temperatures and humidities, and studies conducted under accurately controlled environmental conditions, have supplied information regarding the physiological re
Jan 1, 1930
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New York Meeting, Feb. 17 To 20, 1919The program for the Annual Meeting to be held in New York, Feb.17 to 20, 1919, inclusive, has been nearly completed. Besides the usual meetings for the reading of technical papers, the social features
Jan 12, 1918
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The Application Of Telluric Currents To Surface ProspectingBy Marcel Schlumberger
The electrical methods for surface-prospecting have been well developed in the last 20 years. The method involves, in the classic form, the sending of an electrical current into the soil, by means of
Jan 1, 1940
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Explosions Research Applied to Mine and Quarry BlastingBy Clifton W. Livingston
So many factors influence blasting results that theories and rules are usually dismissed as impractical; the practice prevailing today is arrived at by cut and try. Usually the first step is to experi
Jan 1, 1960
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Some Problems of Engineering Geology as Related toBy M. M. Leighton
THE engineers of Illinois have been submitting to the State Geological Survey an increasing number of requests for advice on their geological problems, including landslides, unequal settling of fills,
Jan 1, 1929
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Guide To Effective Mine Control Of Methane LayersBy S. J. Leach
The possible solution of some of the problems raised in H. L. Hartman's article "Determining Ventilation Requirements for Continuous Miners," which appeared in the March 1962 issue of MINING ENGI
Jan 10, 1962
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Perkin Medal Awarded To Dr. F. G. CottrellOn Friday, Jan. 17, the thirteenth impression of the Perkin Medal was presented to Dr. Frederick Gardner Cottrell, at a meeting of the New York Section of the Society of Chemical Industry, held at the
Jan 3, 1919
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Relations Of National Research Council To Engineering SocietiesAt the University Club, New York, Jan. 23, Chairman George E. Hale and other officers of the National Research Council, gave a dinner to officers of the national engineering and other societies. About
Jan 3, 1919
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Stress Control Technique-An Alternative to Roof Bolting?By Shosei Serata
Conventional roof bolting may be giving ground to a new technique that utilizes only the ground itself to stabilize mine openings. This newly developed stress control technique (SCT) has initially bee
Jan 5, 1976
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Computer Image Processing Techniques Applied To Geologic ProblemsBy Michael J. Abrams
The large amount of data available from Landsat has made digital processing necessary to extract and display that subset of data relevant to the problem being considered. Computer image processing tec
Jan 1, 1977