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Why Stekenjokk Chose All-Hydraulic Drills
What has been billed as the underground drilling technology of the 1980's got a dramatic head start when Boliden engineers at Stekenjokk decided to go with all hydraulic drilling for primary ore
Jan 12, 1977
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Interfacing Technologies in Solution Mining
By Milton E. Wadsworth
Hydrometallurgical processing of ore deposits by solution mining or in situ techniques requires the interfacing of technologies as diverse as hydrology, geology, chemistry, and rubblization. This synt
Jan 12, 1977
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MHD: Tomorrow's Coal Technology
By Joan Melcher
The oil embargo and increasing disillusionment with nu- clear power have put this country's abundant coal reserves in growing demand. Both the government and industry are looking toward increased
Jan 12, 1977
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Mechanized Mining Assures Future Productivity at Sweden's Stekenjokk Copper-Zinc Project
By Ta M. Li
How do you convert a copper-zinc resource into a viable economic mining operation? This problem, unlike most, was complicated by the additional presence of a sub-arctic climate, highest labor costs in
Jan 12, 1977
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US Perspectives for Lead and Zinc
The current status of the US lead and zinc industries was reviewed by J. G. McCullough, president of Amax Lead and Zinc Inc. He reported that in the US, lead and zinc are separate industries because o
Jan 11, 1977
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Mechanization-Key to Improved Productivity
Most lead-zinc mines worldwide have moved to further mechanized techniques to boost productivity, improve safety, and lower costs. The mining session, chaired by S. C. Fall, NL. Industries, and C. J.
Jan 11, 1977
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Environmental Considerations and the Modern Electrolytic Zinc Refinery
Constraints in the location, process selection, and operation of the modern zinc refinery brought about by the heightened environmental awareness of the public were explained by Sanjoy Shome, project
Jan 11, 1977
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Energy Conservation in the Electrolytic Zinc Process
Efficient energy utilization in the electrolytic zinc process, relative to other zinc processes, is one of the reasons for its wide adoption in recent years, says John D. Siddle, zinc plant superinten
Jan 11, 1977
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Metal and Nonmetal Mine Blasting Accidents During 1975-76
By Jack G. Gill, Richard A. Dick
Blasting safety is a subject that cannot be overemphasized. Two years ago, a study was published describing g a series of fatal blasting accidents which took the lives of ten metal and nonmetal miners
Jan 11, 1977
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New Markets and the Environment: Challenges Facing the Lead-Zinc Industry
The Lead-Line Update held in conjunction with the 1977 SME-AIME Fall Meeting in St. Louis provided sessions on mining, mineral processing, extractive metallurgy, and economies to brief the record on t
Jan 11, 1977
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Seven New US Lead-Zinc Mills Since 1970
In the seven years that have elapsed since the AIME World Symposium on Mining and Metallurgy of Lead and Zinc, there have been a number of significant milling innovations and trends implemented in lea
Jan 11, 1977
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Canada's Reserve Base Assures Future Supply
Lead-zinc production in Canada accounted for 19% of the total value of metals and minerals produced in 1976, says Keith C. Hendrick, president of Noranda Sides Corp. Mine production of recoverable zin
Jan 11, 1977
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Underground Extraction Techniques for Thick Coal Seams
By R. V. Ramani, Christopher J. Bise, Robert Stefanko
Over 200 billion tons of coal reserves lie locked up in deposits west of the Mississippi River-and of this, well over 100 billion tons are recoverable only by underground mining methods. Yet, because
Jan 10, 1977
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Who Will Move the Coal?
Depending on viewpoint, slurry pipelines are a necessary part of coal expansion in the West, or an opportunistic venture that could cripple many American railroads.
Jan 10, 1977
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How to Plan for Methane Control in Underground Coal Mines
By J. G. Davis, P. C. Thakur
Hazardous methane gas in coal mining is receiving increased attention due to the increased US demand for coal which has resulted in the exploitation of deeper seams and the utilization of more product
Jan 10, 1977
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Eastern US Coal Recovery from Surface Mines Hovers Around 80%, Says USBM Study
Estimates of 80% coal recovery in strip mining and 5O% recovery in auger mining are commonly used in reserve base calculations, according to a Bureau study team. A survey of coal mining states east of
Jan 10, 1977
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Mapco's Martiki Mine Looks for Full Production in 1977
One of the newest and most modern surface mining operations in the East is gathering steam at Mapco Inc.'s Martiki mine in anticipation of yielding 2.7 million tons (3 million st) of coal annuall
Jan 10, 1977
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Bingham Canyon Switches to Bulk Grease Handling
By William I. Busenbark, Elmer C. Newman
At Bingham Canyon, the world's largest open-pit copper mine, annual grease consumption is in the neighborhood of 109 000 kg (240,000 lb), all of which was 544 (120-16) purchased, warehoused, and
Jan 9, 1977
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How Major New Mines Will be Financed in the Future
By Gordon R. Haworth, J. Terry Aimone
The capital-short mining industry, faced with weak metal markets, will need to devise new and novel methods to finance future expansions.
Jan 9, 1977
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How Mining Firms View Engineering Contractors
By Barbara L. Lakin, Sherman K. Okun
According to a recent market survey, the quality and ability of key personnel, plus past performance on the job, rank high as criteria used by mining companies when selecting a project engineering con
Jan 9, 1977