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Biosorption of Metal Contaminants from Addie Mine WatersBy T. H. Jeffers
The U.S. Bureau of Mines' Salt Lake City Research Center. has developed porous polymeric beads containing immobilized non-living biological materials for extracting metal contaminants? from waste
Jan 1, 1991
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Biosorption of Pb(II) and Cu(II) Ions by Rhodococcus Opacus: Effect of Physicochemical EnvironmentBy B. Y. M. Bueno
Biosorption of heavy metals can be an effective process for the removal of heavy metals ions from aqueous solutions. In this study, the adsorption properties of Rhodococcus opacus biomass for Pb(II) a
Jan 1, 2014
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Biosorption Removal of Aluminum Species from Wastewaters StreamsBy Javier Enrique Basurco Cayllahua
In this work, a gram-positive bacteria was used as biosorbent to elucidate the aluminum load capacity under different conditions related to metallurgical and chemical plants. The sorption data followe
Jan 1, 2009
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Biostimulators from the Waste of Tanning IndustryBy Klara Kodrikova, Vera Kasparkova, Michaela Uhlirova, Karel Kolomaznik
"Potentially hazardous wastes from leather industry (blue shavings) are processed into various biostimulators within two steps. The first step takes place at high pH (11-12) and hydrolyzation is imple
Jan 1, 2008
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Biotechnical MaterialsBy Nelson R. Shaffer
Biotechnology has become a household word of the nineties, and it is expected to become as important in the next century as the computer is in the present. Numerous books and articles portray biotechn
Jan 1, 1994
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Biotechnological Solutions for the Treatment of Pickle LiquorsBy J. L. Huisman
Bio(hydro)metallurgy is the latest development in the ongoing search for efficient and economic metal winning processes. In addition to bioleaching, other biotechnology-based applications are becoming
Jan 1, 2006
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Biotechnological tools in bioleaching: implications for design and control processesBy Patiño E
Bioleaching is an established technology for the pre-treatment of refractory gold ores and concentrates and the leaching of whole ore copper heaps. In many cases, it offers economic, environmental and
Sep 12, 2005
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Biotechnologies for remediation and pollution control in the mining industryBy L. Bernoth, I. Firth, S. Rhodes, P. McAllister
As biotechnologies emerge from laboratories into main-stream application, the benefits they offer are judged against competing technologies and business criteria. Bioremediation technologies have pass
Jan 1, 2000
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Biotechnology And Industrial MineralsBy Nelson R. Shaffer
Glamorous, burgeoning biotechnology and mundane industrial minerals would at first glance seem to share little in common, but in truth, modern biotechnology depends on many minerals. Biotechnical proc
Jan 1, 1995
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Biotechnology Applied to Raw Materials ProcessingBy S. K. Kawatra, T. C. Eisele
"Recent advances in microbiology have made the application of biotechnology to metallurgical processes possible. Hydrometallurgy stands to gain the cost from the use of microorganisms, as they are use
Jan 1, 1988
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Biotechnology Processes for the Treatment of Gold Mill EffluentsBy A. Kapoor
Gold mill effluents contain toxic pollutants such as cyanide (CN), thiocyanate (CNS), ammonia (NH4-N), and a variety of toxic metals. Various practical and economical technologies are in use for the r
Nov 1, 2002
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BIRD BALLs, an Effective Barrier to Avian MortalityBy Lee R. Martin, Michael R. Taber
Bird Balls™, the latest development in the ongoing battle at mine sites across North America, help to eliminate accidental avian mortality caused by birds ingesting cyanide leachate. Bird Balls™ are a
Jan 1, 1996
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Bird River Chromite Deposits, ManitobaBy J. D. Bateman
DURING the summer of 1942 several chromite deposits were discovered in the Lac du Bonnet district about eighty miles northeast of Winnipeg. The deposits are confined to the Bird River complex, a folde
Jan 1, 1943
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Biringuccio's "Pirotechnia" - A Neglected Italian Metallurgical ClassicBy Cyril S., Smith
WE cannot but marvel at the fact that fire is necessary for almost every operation. It takes the sands of the earth and melts them-now into glass, now into silver, minium or other lead or some substan
Jan 1, 1940
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Birmingham Meeting - May, 1888Jan 1, 1889
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Birmingham Meeting - October, 1924Jan 1, 1925
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Birmingham Paper - Biographical Notice of Byron W. Chewer - May 1888By William H. Pettee
A few weeks ago the Institute lost, by death, from its list of members one who in recent years, by frequent attendance at meetings, by the preparation of papers, and in many other ways, had shown a wa
Jan 1, 1888
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Birmingham Paper - Calculations of the Available Heat and the Required Dimensions of Chimneys, Combustion-Chambers, and Gas-Burners in the Use of Blast-Furnace Gases for Firing BoilersBy Frank C. Roberts
Neglecting the hydrogen and hydrocarbons, 1 will assume the following analysis as a fair average composition, by weight, of the waste gases escaping from a coke-burning blast-furnace: CO2............
Jan 1, 1889
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Birmingham Paper - Notes on the Clinton Group in AlabamaBy Truman H. Aldrich
The red, or fossiliferous, ore is found in the Clinton group of the Silurian formation. This group is from 100 to 500 ft. thick in Alabama, and its outcrops have been mapped by the State or the U. S.
Jan 1, 1925
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Birmingham Paper - The Losses in Roasting Gold-Ores and the Volatility of Gold.By Samuel B. Christy
Jan 1, 1889