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Helping Banks To Manage Mineral Land TrustsBy S. M. Pickering
Banks frequently manage large privately owned mineral land trust accounts for estate heirs. The bank has a fiduciary obligation to follow the “Prudent Man Rule”, which requires that trust properties
Jan 1, 2002
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New Tunneling Innovations Revolve Around More Efficient Disc CuttersBy Desiree Willis
Disc cutters have determined excavation rates of rock tunneling projects for more than 50 years. First developed in 1956 by James S. Robbins, disc cutters (then 279 mm or 11 in. in diameter) were use
Jan 1, 2007
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Warm Springs Ponds: Superfund SuccessBy Harry E. Hughes
A section of the largest Superfund site in the country has become a success story for engineering innovation and for cooperative problem solving. “Superfund site” and “success story” are phrases that
Jan 1, 1996
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Engineering Geology Of The Mica Underground PowerplantBy Douglas D. Campbell, Alan S. Imrie
INTRODUCTION Mica Dam is located on the Columbia River just downstream of the "big bend" of the Columbia, where it leaves the Rocky Mountain Trench and begins to flow southwards, approximately 85 m
Jan 1, 1976
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Fitness-For-Purpose: Should You Buy One Grinding Mill For The Price Of Two?By P. Ulrich, V. Svalbonas
The early to mid 1980s was a period of mining consolidation, and many senior design engineers retired from the mill industry. Similar conditions have existed in the last few years. This creates a lo
Jan 1, 2001
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Leaching Behavior of Lithium from Bauxite Residue Using Acetic Acid Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration (1c2dd284-40d8-467a-9f57-cf193eac1926)By Ning Wang, Tengfei Guo, Wanyan Li, Hanjie Wen, Hannian Gu, Zehai Li
Bauxite residue (red mud) is an alkaline waste derived from the industrial process for extraction of alumina from bauxite ore. Some bauxite residues contain considerable concentrations of critical met
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New XRF Analyzer For Elemental Analysis Of Sample StreamsBy C. Bachmann, M. J. Laurila, A. J. Widenman, A. Klein
Elemental analysis of slurry streams using X-ray fluorescence (XRF) has long been employed. However, detector technology has limited the application of XRF devices. Using detector technology employed
Jan 1, 1999
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Alumar: Improving Local Communities Capacities For Implementation A Sustainable Development Model. São Luis- Maranhão-Brazil.By D. Campos, J. M. Macedo, S. Chadwick
The incorporation of low cost technology transfer to increase the ability of locals to acquire and maintain long term employment are key ingredients for sustainable industrial development. Alcoa’s Alu
Jan 1, 2004
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Tunneling Toronto Canada 1970By G. F. Jenkins, P. S. Hobden
Toronto as a geographical area provides an exceptionally wide variety of subsoil stratiphication. Tunneling consequently required a very wide range of adaptabilities to meet its changing conditions. T
Jan 1, 1997
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Geologists Add Value at Newmont’s Nevada Mines – Part OneBy Wayne Trudel, Lloyd McEvers, Lori Clarke, Eric Saderholm, Charles Lynn Bolin, Leroy Schutz
Newmont mine geologists in Nevada are most proficient when applying technical expertise with multi-departmental teams in three main settings. The first is value creation through near-mine discovery, d
Jan 1, 2004
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Development of Australia’s first major diamond discovery outlinedBy Richard D. Lang
Introduction Argyle is located in the Kimberley region in northwest Australia (Fig. 1). It is a significant diamond discovery by world standards and is the first major diamond find in Australia. T
Jan 1, 1986
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The Study Of Geotechnical Parameters For Paste Technologies: A General ReviewBy A. Bascetin
Waste materials caused by mining activities are an important environmental problem. Paste technology is a good alternative for waste management because it has many benefits in the aspects of environme
Jan 1, 2012
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Challenges in undertaking inertisation of fires in underground minesBy A. D. S. Gillies
Inertisation is used to enhance the safety of underground mine areas either to avoid the potential for a combustion event or to stabilize a situation after an ignition, fire or heating. The primary ob
Jan 1, 2009
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Use Of The 1500-pDR For Gravimetric Respirable Dust Measurements At MinesBy W. R. Reed
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) uses light-scattering dust monitors (nephelometers) in its research to develop dust controls to reduce respirable silica dust overexpo
Jan 1, 2012
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Using electrostatic precipitation to control diesel exhaust particulate emissionsBy A. Farnoud
Thousands of miners, construction workers, and truck drivers are exposed to diesel exhaust particles. Diesel Particulate Matter (DPM) is a probable human carcinogen and stringent occupational and envi
Jan 1, 2009
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Borehole Mining - Remote AdvantagesBy G. Abramov
The 20th Century saw the modern mining industry enriched by one outstanding method of extracting of mineral resources called Borehole Mining (BHM). Mean while, despite its successful track record in w
Jan 1, 2001
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Why The Resource Curse Is A ConcernBy Graham A. Davis
?The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled by little else. Practic
Jan 1, 2008
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On-Line Rheometer For Mineral SlurriesBy S. K. Kawatra, A. K. Bakshi, T. C. Eisele
An on-line rheometer, suitable for use with slurries, has been developed at Michigan Technological University. This rheometer can be used with both Newtonian and non-Newtonian slurries, and produces c
Jan 1, 1999
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Trapezoidal Tapered Ring—Key Position Selection in Curved TunnelsBy Shimi Tzobery, John E. Shamma, Samuel Swartz, Gary B. Hemphill
The trapezoidal tapered ring method has made significant progress in recent years for shielded-TBM projects, excavating tunnels with high overburden, strict water tightness criteria, and multiple curv
Jan 1, 2005
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Inland Steel Uses Technology, Cost Control, and Employee Involvement to Improve Its ProductivityBy Samuel A. Reipas
Introduction The ore mining industry has been successful because of technological progress and huge sums of capital investment. But new technology and plants have not come cheap. The problem now is c
Jan 11, 1983