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News - Mine, Mill To Launch Organizing Drive SoonThe 48th convention of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, held in New York City recently, saw delegates vote funds for a new organizational drive expected to begin immediately.
Jan 1, 1952
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Mine Hoists--Proper Selection To Fit The ApplicationBy Gary Beerkircher
The mine hoisting equipment that is selected and installed at a mine is the lifeline of the mine, and therefore the proper selection of equipment will save a lot of time and money during the life of t
Jan 1, 1975
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Application of Geology to Mining at Giant YellowknifeBy J. D. Bateman
At Giant Yellowknife, where high grade gold-bearing orebodies are highly irregular in shape, geology has been applied extensively to the mining of ore. The classical functions of the mine geologist in
Jan 12, 1951
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Use Of Geological Engineering Methods Continues To GrowBy P. D. Proctor, M. P. Nackowski
Quantification in recording geologic phenomena and application of well-known geologic principles to engineering works continued at an increasing rate during the year. Highway departments, water resour
Jan 2, 1968
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John Fritz Medal Presented to Senator Guglielmo MarconiBEFORE an audience which included many notable members of the engineering profession, the John Fritz Medal was presented to Senator Guglielmo Marconi on July 6, 1922, in the auditorium of the Engineer
Jan 8, 1922
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Pennsylvania Stows Refuse To Bolster Abandoned Coal MinesBy David R. Maneval, Ralph A. Lambert, H. B. Charmbury
Subsidence, although it may or may not be apparent on the surface, is an inevitable consequence of deep coal mining and a frequent cause of damage to surface structures. Efforts to prevent subsidence
Jan 4, 1967
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Some Applications of Potential Methods to Structural StudiesBy E. G. Leonardon
THE first to appreciate and foresee the value of applying electrical measurements to structural studies was Prof. Conrad Schlumberger, Professor of Physics at the School of Mines in Paris. One of his
Jan 1, 1928
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Reservoir Engineering – General - Modifications to Decline Curve AnalysisBy Homer N. Mead
This report develops equations for decline curve analysis based upon the premise that the rate of change of the reciprocal of decline for succeeding time intervals is constant when the reservoir is pr
Jan 1, 1957
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The Importance Of Transportation To The Minerals IndustryBy R. S. Shrode, R. F. Bunting
Transportation is one of several important increments in the total market cost of most commodities. On a national average it has been reported that transportation accounts for about 25% of the total c
Jan 1, 1970
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Railroad Cut-0ff Speeds Up Transport To FrontBy completing a double-track railroad cut-off, involving a large volume of cut and fill, in addition to a half-mile bridge spanning an important French river, engineers in the zone of the Services of
Jan 12, 1918
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Report Of Delegation Of American Engineers To FranceThe Delegation of American Engineers constituted by the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, the American Society of Civil Engineers, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers,
Jan 9, 1919
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Application Of Pulverized Coal To Copper Refinery FurnacesBy E. W. Steele
IN THE copper-casting department of a modern electrolytic copper refinery there are two kinds of casting furnaces: the first, or anode furnace for casting crude copper into anodes for electrolysis; th
Jan 3, 1925
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Cyanide Leaching to Extract Copper From Zinc ConcentrateBy Norman Hedley, Howard Tabachnick
The extraction of gold and silver from ores with alkaline cyanide solutions is well known. Cyanide solutions are also good solvents for many base metal minerals, particularly most of the copper minera
Jan 2, 1960
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The Application Of Centrifugal Forces To Gravitational ClassifiersBy Robert C. Emmett, Donald A. Dahlstrom
FOR many years gravitational classification has been employed as a basic tool in beneficiation of minerals and coal. While improvements have been made to increase efficiency and fields of application,
Jan 10, 1953
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The Joplin MeetingBy AIME AIME
IN accordance with the custom of recent years, the Institute joined with the Western Division of the American Mining Congress in holding a joint meeting at Joplin on Sept. 28, 29 and 30. Actually the
Jan 1, 1931
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Improved Open Pit Blasting – A Return to Chambering?A rotary chambered blasthole technique has initially indicated a 30% overall improvement in drill and blast department productivity. The method, developed at several open pit copper mines in Arizona,
Jan 3, 1975
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Adaptation of Elastic-Wave Exploration to Unconsolidated StructuresBy Frank Rieber
THE study of earthquakes long ago developed the fact that by studying the travel times of the various groups of waves from the same earthquake, as received on seismographs at varying distances, major
Jan 9, 1928
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Specimen Proportion – Key to Better Compressive Strength TestsBy Niles E. Grosvenor
Complex underground mining problems are increasing as mining depths increase. Many of these problems have been solved mainly by unsystematized trial-and-error methods based on individual experiences.
Jan 1, 1963
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Using Wastewater Solids to Reclaim Strip-Mined LandBy Robert Carlson, Hugh McMillan
During 1967, the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago adopted a policy of land application as a method of using the solids produced in the wastewater treatment process. Research by the Ag
Jan 1, 1976
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Development-Sampling And Ore-Valuation Of Gold-Mines.By C. BARING HORIVOOD
(Chattanooga Meeting, October, 1908.) THIS paper is intended, in the light of recent investigations, to call attention to some of the essential features of good practice in sampling and mine-valuatio
Jan 1, 1909