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  • CIM
    Re-Grind Practice at Canadian Exploration Limited

    By H. A. Steane

    THIS PAPER describes the re-grind section in the 2,000-ton per day, lead-zinc flotation mill of Canadian Exploration Limited, near Salmo, B.C. There are two re-grind units in operation, one in the l

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Applications of Sub-Surface Pressure Data

    By Eliodor Stoian

    PRESSURE information has earned a place of recognition to almost everyone interested in oil and gas production. This interest is due chiefly to the multitude of uses to which it can be put. A sub-surf

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Manufacture and Uses of Saskatchewan Saltcake

    By G. F. Miller

    ONLY IN THE Province of Saskatchewan is natural sodium sulphate found in Canada in amounts large enough to make recovery economically sound. Geologists have estimated that the numerous deposits within

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Mineral Possibilities of Yukon Territory

    By Aaro E. Aho

    Yukon, one of the most potentially accessible, relatively undeveloped, regions of Canada, has major mineral possibilities. The Klondike placer gold fields and the Mayo silver-lead ?district are the so

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Gas Well Hydrate Control by Sub-Surface Injection of Glycol

    By B. L. Moreau

    Certain gas wells tend to form hydrates in the production tubing. This paper outlines a method developed and used by the Author's company to overcome the problem. The injection of glycol to con

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Low Temperature Fluidized Carbonization in Relation to Energy Production

    By C. Moreland

    Fluidized low-temperature carbonization of coal, a recent development, offers a possibility of reducing fuel costs of coal-burning electric ?generating plants. The Research Council of Alberta have b

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    The Lithium. and Beryllium Pegmatites of Southeastern Manitoba

    By J. F. Davis

    Pegmatite dykes containing lithium minerals and beryl occur dose to the borders of intrusive masses of granitic rock in the Winnipeg River area of Manitoba. Both vertical and flat-lying dykes are pres

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Electronic Computer Applications to Petroleum Engineering

    By J. G. Debanne

    MOST company-employed petroleum engineers have in their accounting departments punch-card computers that can perform engineering calculations thirty to three hundred times faster than desk calculators

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    The Effect of Different Surface Treatments on the Fatigue Strength of Drill Steel

    By T. W. Wlodek

    In this paper the relative merits of shot peening, induction surface hardening, spiral-rolling, and the combination of these surface treatments, are evaluated on the basis of their capacity to increas

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Western Canada Uranium as a Fuel Resource

    By Richard E. Barrett

    SOME YEARS AGO I was associated with a mining operation which, because of its isolated location, burned wood for heating purposes. Year after year the tractors and tucks hauled the cordwood in from th

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    A Seismic Investigation of Mine "Bumps" in the Crowsnest Pass Coal Field

    By W. G. Mine

    In September, 1953, seismographs were installed in the Crowsnest Pass area of Alberta and British Columbia to study the 'bumps' which were occurring in the coal mines at Fernie and Coleman,

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Prevention of Accidents In and Around Coal Mines

    By Harry F. Weaver

    WHEN 1 was assigned by the Director of the United States Bureau of Mines to present a paper at this annual meeting of the Mining Society of Nova Scotia, 1 was grateful, honoured, and elated to realize

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Industrial Development in British Columbia Past, Present, and Future

    By J. C. Ingram

    IT SEEMS particularly appropriate that, in celebrating its Diamond Anniversary, the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metalturgy chose our Province of British Columbia as its locale in this, our own Ce

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Well Improvement Techniques 1n the Peace River Area

    By W. Hunka

    PACIFIC PETROLEUMS, Ltd. first discovered commercial quantities of gas in the Peace River area in 1952. Development of gas wells in this area is quite ex-pensive due to low penetration rates. To impro

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Coal 1n Western Canada and Its Uses

    By M. M. Williams

    WESTERN CAN ADA'S coal industry has experienced a serious set-back since 1949, following a pattern well known to its counterpart in the United States. The loss in coal markets in Western Canada h

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Some Metallurgical Aspects of the Blade Fatigue Problem in Aircraft Gas Turbines

    By K. B. Young

    Possibly the most complex fatigue problem associated with the development of the axial-flow 'gas turbine is discussed in its broader aspects from the metallurgical viewpoint. Reference is made to

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Open-Pit of Mining by the at Knob Iron Lake, Ore Company of Canada at Knob Lake, Quebec

    By V. Gregoire

    THE DEVELOPMENT by the Iron Ore Company of Canada of the Quebec-Labrador mining project, which eventually led to 'Iron Ore in 1954', involved, from the start, several distinct undertakings.

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Utilization of Alberta Sub-Bituminous Coal

    By W. A. Lang

    COAL of sub-bituminous rank underlies much of the plains area of Alberta. This coal is geo-logically young, and occurs in Belly River and Edmonton strata of Up-per Cretaceous age. Generally, the seams

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Review of the Mineral Industry of Nova Scotia

    By M. G. Goudge

    IT IS ENOOURAGING indeed to note during the past year that, despite a slackening off in many markets and with numerous major difficulties and problems to solve, the mining industry of Nova Scotia was

    Jan 1, 1958

  • CIM
    Prospecting by Use of Natural Alternating Magnetic Fields of Audio and Sub-Audio Frequencies

    By S. H. Ward

    An account of a new method of investigating the electrical .properties J the earth's crust is presented. The method, called AFMAG, employs, as a source, natural alternating magnetic fields of aud

    Jan 1, 1958