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  • CIM
    Future Raw Material Needs of The Canadian Steel Industry Some Problems and Opportunities

    By R. J. Goodman, P. Lafleur

    This paper presents a current interpretation and projections of recent statistics on raw materials availability based on familiarity with the Canadian steel industry and its development. Problems and

    Jan 1, 1976

  • CIM
    CIL Gold Extraction from Preg Robbing Autoclave Discharges

    By G. Van Weert

    In the spring of 2010 double refractory ores from historical stockpiles were processed through Barrick's Goldstrike pressure oxidation facility, thereby providing preg robbing feeds for a variety

    Jan 1, 2011

  • CIM
    A Chained Book - Now Free to All

    By Hazel Lyman Nickel

    Daring to try where others had failed, Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover translated from the Latin the principal (and first) textbook on the mining and metallurgical profession, De Re Metallica, 1556, whic

    Jan 1, 1949

  • CIM
    Froth Recovery Factor-What is it, And why is it so Difficult to Measure?

    By M. C. Harris

    The past twenty to thirty years have seen unprecedented research activity aimed at understanding the performance of flotation froths. In 1990, Finch and Dobby coined the term froth recovery factor, Rr

    Jan 1, 2009

  • CIM
    Improving Double Bench Face Performance at the Ekati Diamond MineTM Site

    By Judy K. Todd

    Double benching has been utilized as an excavation technique in open pit mines for many years. This process involves drilling, blasting, and excavating the material for the design bench height. A seco

    May 1, 2002

  • CIM
    Mill Project Development at El Limon, Nicaragua

    By Steve Hubbard, Brad Marchant, Rolando Cuadra

    "Triton Mining Corporation acquired the rights to Mina El Limon in Nicaragua in 1993 by international bid. The bid included the gold operations at Limon and an exploration concession of approximately

    Jan 1, 1997

  • CIM
    Taking Stock of Science

    I N the introductory chapter to "Man and Metals," T. A. Rickard wrote "Five hundred thousand years ago the first footfalls of man's oncoming echoed down the corridors of time." This phrase has al

    Jan 1, 1965

  • CIM
    Pit limit optimization using stochastic process

    By M. Ataee-pour, S. E. Jalali

    So far, a large number of algorithms have been developed for the optimization of pit limits, most of which follow deterministic rules. In this paper, a new algorithm is introduced, which follows a pro

    Jan 1, 2006

  • CIM
    Chapter 5. Royalty Interests

    By Karl J. C. Harries

    "5.1. INTRODUCTIONThis chapter is intended as a general overview of the subject of royalties between private parties – royalties extracted by governments are not dealt with. This same subject is cover

    Jan 1, 2003

  • CIM
    The Ecstall Story: The Ecstall Concentrator

    By Michael P. Amsden

    "THE ECSTALL CONCENTRATOR is situated adjacent to Highway 101 and the Ontario Northland Railroad, 15 miles east of Timmins, Ontario. Ore is delivered to the concentrator by rail from the mine, which i

    Jan 1, 1974

  • CIM
    Technical and Economic Lessons from the Last Charcoal-Blast Furnaces in the World

    By R. Luchese de Moraes, J. A. Matthews, C. Feliciano Bruzual

    The role of biomass char in blast furnaces has been re-examined by scientists worldwide, as a feasible option to reduce the carbon intensity of ironmaking. This contribution makes a technical and econ

    Jan 1, 2015

  • CIM
    Carl Auer and the Beginning of the Rare Earths Industry

    By F. Habashi

    "The rare earths industry started in Austria in 1887 by Carl Auer von Welsbach (1858-1929) Professor of Chemistry at the University of Vienna. The process was based on monazite sand transported from B

    Jan 1, 2012

  • CIM
    Iron Control in Hydrometallurgy: The Positive Side of the Coin

    During the hydrometallurgical processing of the major base metals Cu, Zn, Ni and Co, the presence of iron is normally a serious complication, and iron separation from the pay metals usually constitute

    Jan 1, 2006

  • CIM
    Origins of Electrorerefining: Birth of the Technology and the World's First Commercial Electrorefinery

    By A. E. Wraith, J. Protheroe Jones, P. J. Mackey

    The world’s first copper electrorefinery started production in 1869 at Burry Port in South Wales. Built within the Pembrey Copper Works which had commenced smelting operations in 1849, the new refiner

    Jan 1, 2019

  • CIM
    Relative Discovery Potential of the Principal Economic Metals

    By C. J. Sullivan

    "The outlook for supplying the world's metal needs in the next twenty-five years is good, although in several cases basic costs are likely to increase with rising demand. Metal prices calculated at a

    Jan 1, 1970

  • CIM
    Brass making in medieval western Europe

    By Sandra K. Zacharias

    Brass, a deliberate alloy of copper and zinc, has been known since before Roman times. There are two main methods of making brass: (1) Cementation or calamine process - crushed zinc ore (calamine, Zn

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Helicopterborne Electromagnetic, Magnetic and Radiometric Survey-Coronation Mine, Saskatchewan

    By Arthur R. Rattew

    In conjunction with the research study of the Coronation Mine recommended by the National Advisory Committee on Research in the Geo-logical Sciences and coordinated by the Geological Survey of Canada,

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    On the early use of iron in the Arctic

    By Michael L. Wayman

    Archaeological and ethnographic work during the last century has shown clearly that metals have played a small but important role in prehistoric Arctic cultures. For at least the past several millenia

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Geophysical Discoveries in the Mattagami, Quebec

    By N. R. Paterson, D. G. MacKay

    "The geology of the Mattagami mining camp, while of particular economic significance, is unfortunately obscured by a very thick mantle of overburden. For this reason geo-physical methods have been rel

    Jan 1, 1960

  • CIM
    Behaviour of Shales in Underground Environments

    By C. Derek Martin

    "Predicting the ground response for tunnels in weak shales remains challenging. Predicting the ground response is challenged by difficulties in characterising the material, and our ability to predict

    Jan 1, 2015