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  • CIM
    Sudden Release of Ground Stresses in the Coal Mines of Western Canada

    By H. E. Miard

    "IntroductionIT HAS BEEN SAID, with good reason, that the future of the coal mining industry, in our mountainous regions at least, depends on ability to extend operations successfully to depths greate

    Jan 1, 1953

  • CIM
    A Model for Implementing & Continuously Improving the Automated Change Management Process for Construction Mega Projects

    By Sh. Karimidorabati

    In the construction industry, project changes constitute a major cause of delay, disruption, cost increases, poor quality and unsatisfying performance. They are also known as a main factor of litigati

    Aug 1, 2013

  • CIM
    Experience With Some Electrical and Magnetic Methods of Prospecting

    By W. A. Jones

    Purpose of Paper Geophysics is a highly developed science which has found a wide use in industry. Perhaps the most spectacular application has been in the field of oil exploration. It has been esti

    Jan 1, 1947

  • CIM
    Surface Reactions of Sulfide Minerals in ARD Assessment

    By Andrea R. Gerson, Roger St. C. Smart, Russell Schumann, Joan E. Thomas, Warwick Stewart, Stuart Miller

    Sequential Net Acid Generation (NAG) accelerated oxidation testing using peroxide was carried out on single sulfide mineral samples. The calculation of the nett acid production potential (NAPP) assume

    Jan 1, 2004

  • CIM
    Laboratory simulation of a closed-circuit grind for a heterogeneous ore

    By J. A. Finch

    Samples of feed and product from a closed grinding circuit treating a heterogeneous lead-zinc ore were taken. The feed was subjected to laboratory batch grinding in a rod and ball mill with the object

    Jan 1, 1979

  • CIM
    Explosion Prevention in the Coal Mines Of Alberta: With Special Reference to Applications of the Rock-Dusting Method

    By George S. Rice

    Foreword Explosion hazards differ widely in the mines of different fields or coal basins. They also differ as between different mines in the same basin or fold, because of variations in gas enterin

    Jan 1, 1927

  • CIM
    The Failure To Define of the Mining Industry Accounting Objectives

    By MacDonald W. L. F. C. A.

    IN accordance with the usual approach to a participation in a panel discussion, this paper is, in some respects, intentionally controversial. I would suggest, how-ever that there is more than a grain

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Lateral Development Drilling by 'Jumbo'

    By C. E. Dowker

    "IntroductionMechanization underground at the Buffalo Ankerite mine in Deloro township, Porcupine district, had reached a high level by 1944, both in equipment available, and in the use of this equipm

    Jan 1, 1950

  • CIM
    The Health Experience of two Communities Associated with Mining in British Columbia, Canada

    The Nak?azdli First Nation and the municipality of Fort St. James are located in the Stuart Lake/Nak?al Bun area and are not unfamiliar to mining. These northern British Columbian communities have bee

    Aug 1, 2013

  • CIM
    Continuous wave Nd:YAG laser welding of ZE41A-T5 magnesium sand castings: conduction or keyhole mode

    By M. Xian, M. Jahazi, Y. L. Lin

    The 2-mm butt joints of ZE41A-T5 sand castings were laser welded at different defocusing distances on two surface conditions (as-cast or machined) using a continuous wave 4 kW Nd:YAG laser system at a

    Jan 1, 2004

  • CIM
    The Woodstock iron works Carleton County, New Brunswick

    By R. R. Potter

    "New Brunswick became a separate province in 1784, shortly after the influx of a large number of Loyalists from the United States. Many of these people settled along the Saint John River, including th

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Salt in Ontario

    By G. R. Guillet

    Salt is restricted to five major beds in south western Ontario, totalling as much as 200 m in thickness. These beds are located at depths ranging from 270 m to 750 m below the surface, fringing Lake H

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    The Steep Rock Development in the Canadian Economy

    By M. S. Fotheringham

    Recognition of the Growing Importance of Iron and Steel Few Canadians have yet become aware that Canada's vast iron ore resources, the greater part of which is only now beginning to be developed

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Valuation of Mineral Properties without Mineral Resources: A Review of Market-Based Approaches (c56e0f9b-373c-416b-a251-b9027f9776ff)

    By Ross D. Lawrence

    "Comparable transaction analysis is the best known of the market approaches to valuation of exploration-stage mineral properties. The analysis of option and farm-in agreements can also provide useful

    Jan 1, 2003

  • CIM
    Keynote Address - Energy Session

    By John J. Laffin

    "IN THE BOOK that has been rated the best seller of all time, it is predicted that man will earn his livelihood by the sweat of his brow. Apparently man has accepted the statement as a challenge and h

    Jan 1, 1972

  • CIM
    Shaft Sinking I Company of and Developn1ent at the Potash America Ltd.'s Saskatchewan Potash Operation

    By Cummings. J. B., R. Haworth

    "THE OPERATION of the Potash Company of America, Ltd., at its plant near Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, is the result of many years of exploratory and development work, culminating in the construction of a

    Jan 1, 1960

  • CIM
    Some notes on the Mining Law of Manitoba, and on the Mines Act of 1930

    By H. F. Maulson

    For the benefit of those who are not familiar with the history of the western Provinces-Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta-as regards our natural resources, a few words of explanation may be in order

    Jan 1, 1930

  • CIM
    Reclamation from Coal Mine Waste Dumps

    By G. C. Hambleton

    "The author has had wide experience in the reclamation of coal from coal mine waste dumps in the United Kingdom.The paper includes such topics as the processing decision and factors affecting processa

    Jan 1, 1972

  • CIM
    Resource Recovery From Waste Waters: Using Biomineralisation for the Selective Recovery of Metals from Acid Rock Drainage and Mine Process Waters

    By D. B. Johnson

    Acidic, metal-rich waters generated at working metal mines and abandoned mine sites are generally considered to be major pollutants of the environment. However, the metals they contain often have sign

    Aug 1, 2013

  • CIM
    The Application of Methane Extraction Booms in Cave Areas for Methane Removal from Headings Directly Behind a ?U-Ventilated? Longwall Advance

    By J. Drenda

    The model for methane removal from the workings directly behind an advancing longwall as presented in this paper may be used for U-ventilated cross or length-wise systems of longwall advance, starting

    Aug 1, 2013