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  • CIM
    Mechanical –Metallurgical Problems Associated with Mine Drilling Operations

    By T. W. Wlodek

    "AbstractSatisfactory mine drilling operations depend on the good performance of the drilling machine, and of what may be called the drill set, i.e., the following four elements: bit, attachment, dril

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    A Nomenclature of Igneous Rocks

    By I. C. Brown

    Introduction Many tables of nomenclature for igneous rocks have been introduced from time to time, and each has its strong proponents. As a result, any discussion of igneous? rocks is apt to prove co

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    The Influence of Roasting Temperature Upon Gold Extraction by Cyanidation from Refractory Gold Ores

    By R. Carter, C. S. Samis

    "SummaryThe results of this investigation indicate that the gold in the cyanide tailing of refractory gold cyanides is occluded in fused •particles formed during roasting. This conclusion was reached

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Coal Preparation Plant of Old Sydney Collieries, Limited, Sydney Mines, C.B.

    By J. A. Russell

    "UNTIL the last few years, the collieries of the Dominion Coal Company, Limited, while highly mechanized as to the cutting and transportation of the coal, still relied on the hand-loading of coal from

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    The Past, Present, and Future of the Canadian Steel Industry

    By J. Convey, S. L. Gertsman

    "THE EXPANSION of steel capacity is seldom spectacular. It may be for this reason that the remarkable progress made in Canada has not been generally recognized. In 1950, Canada's output of steel ingot

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Recovery of Barytes at Walton, N.S.

    By G. G. Campbell

    "HistoricalBARYTES was mined in Nova Scotia as early as 1874 from a deposit at Five Islands, on the north shore of Minas Basin. The first record of the presence of the mineral at the Walton site appea

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Proposed C.I. M. Foundation

    On the recent trip from Vancouver to Calgary with the President, Mr. C. C. Huston, and yourself, I had the opportunity of outlining a plan based on the following: Among the aims of the Institute are,

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Research and Natural Resources

    By N. H. Grace

    "IntroductionA STRIKING FEATURE of the past twenty years has been the application of organized scientific and industrial research to problems of national defence and security and to the development of

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Plans for Export of Natural Gas from Alberta

    By D. P. McDonald

    "IntroductionTHE PURPOSE of this paper is to present .a summary of the evidence given before the Petroleum and Natural Gas Conservation Board in support of applications to it for permits to export nat

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Coal in Canada, 1951 Industrial Requirements and Supply

    "IntroductionNOTE.-All figures on the supply and consumption of coal in Canada cited in this paper were collected and reported by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The friendly and efficient co-opera

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Asbestos Floats

    By M. S. Badollet

    "IntroductionASBESTOS FLOATS may be defined briefly as blends of air-borne particles of fibrous asbestos and dusts produced during the milling stages and collected by Cottrell precipitators, dust shed

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    A New Electromagnetic Device for the Surveying of Subsurface Conductors

    By A. E. Lehmberg

    "IT IS KNOWN that some ores of sulphide type, such as pyrite, chalcopyrite, and bornite have an electrical conductivity comparable to that of metals, and accordingly much higher than the conductivity

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Further Potash Discoveries in Saskatchewan

    By A. J. Williams

    "IntroductionAN EXCELLENT paper entitled Potash Discoveries in Western Canada (l) was presented to the 1948 Annual Meeting of the C.l.M. by L. Heber Cole, of the Department of Mines and Resources, Ott

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Review of Chemical Methods

    By F. T. Rabbitts

    Introduction When the investigation of radioactive ores began at the Mines Branch about five years ago it was at once evident that improved chemical methods for the determination of uranium were esse

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Permafrost Problems in Oil Development in Northern Canada

    By R. A. Hemstock

    "OIL EXPLORATION in Western Canada has produced outstanding results in the past few years. From such successes as Leduc and Redwater on the western plains, oilmen are now moving north in the ever-wide

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Geology of the Coleville Field, Saskatchewan

    By G. J. Hamilton

    "THE Royalite-Canada Southern Coleville No. 1 gas strike of August 15th, 1951, and the closely following low gravity black-oil strike of August 23rd, were the first of a series of recent oil and gas d

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Development of the Science of Grinding

    By L. E. Djingheuzian

    "IntroductionDURING the past two decades an enormous amount of empirical data has been accumulating on grinding. These data have been obtained by mill operators on grinding ores with a diversity of ch

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    The Effect of Certain Metallic Impurities on the Properties of Zamak 3-Type Zinc-Base Die Casting Alloys

    By J. W. Meier, J. O. Edwards, R. C. Bell

    "IntroductionTHE DIE CASTING industry .as we know it today is the direct result of the invention and development of die casting machines during the nineteenth century and of reliable alloys in the twe

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Sources of Sulphur in Canada

    By T. H. Janes

    "IntroductionSULPHUR is a constituent of many industrial products. It is part •of almost anything we eat, wear, or use. In fact, sulphur is so important that there has been an increasing tendency in r

    Jan 1, 1952

  • CIM
    Canada’s Petroleum Industry

    By Oliver B. Hopkins

    "WE HAVE patterned our lives on the things we take from under the earth's surface. Our civilization is built upon the ore from which we obtain our metals and the fuels which power the world as we know

    Jan 1, 1952