Search Documents

Sort by

  • SME
    An Active Proximity Warning System For Surface And Underground Mining Applications

    By W. H. Schiffbauer

    NIOSH has developed an active proximity warning system called HASARD (Hazardous Area Signaling and Ranging Device) for warning workers as they approach known dangerous areas around heavy mining equipm

    Jan 1, 2001

  • SME
    Carbon Black Production From Waste Tires

    By B. P. Faulkner, M. Weinecke

    Svedala started a development program in 1997 to develop a process to convert waste tires into valuable commodities. A review of numerous approaches revealed short-comings in the various approaches

    Jan 1, 2001

  • SME
    Development Of A Preliminary Methodology For Determining Maximum Economic Recovery

    By H. Maleki, G. Tetreault

    This study was initiated by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to develop guidelines for determining the maximum economic recovery of resources in coal mines. The work was in response to a requireme

    Jan 1, 2001

  • SME
    Capillary Cover Design For Leach Pad Closure

    By K. Burke, G. Zhan, A. Mayer

    A cover with capillary barrier effects (CCBE) is being constructed on the AA Leach Pad at the Barrick Goldstrike Mine site near Carlin, Nevada. The purpose of the cover is to eliminate/minimize infil

    Jan 1, 2001

  • DFI
  • AUSIMM
    Ambient Temperature Oxidation of Enargite

    By N J Welham

    A commercial enargite concentrate was mechanically milled in inert and oxidising atmospheres for 10 hours. No substantial effect was observed in either an inert atmosphere or in air other than a broad

    Jan 1, 2001

  • SME
    A Non-Segregating "Rocky Paste Fill'' (RPF) Produced by Co- Disposal of Cemented De-Slimed Tailings Slurry and Graded Rockfill

    By Ian Sheppard, Kugan Kuganathan

    The Mount Isa Rocky Paste Fill (RPF) was one of the five fill options investigated for the Enterprise Mine filling between June 1996 and September 1996. Co-disposal of deslimed cemented tailings (CHF)

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    CIM standards on mineral resources and reserves: definitions and guidelines

    By John Postle, Maureen Jensen, Marcel Vallee, Bernie Haystead, Dan Hora, Graham Clow

    The Committee's proposed standards establish definitions and guidelines for the reporting of Exploration Information, Mineral Resources and Mineral Reserves in Canada and are identified as the "CIM St

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Exploitation de la pierre de taille au Québec dans la province de Grenville de 1983 à 1997

    By Yves Bellemare

    Entre 1983 et 1997, l'exploitation de la pierre de taille au Québec a été marquée par l'émergence et la consolidation de plusieurs nouvelles variétés de granit, provenant exclusivement ou presque de l

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Building stone resources in Saskatchewan

    By Paul Guliov

    Preliminary investigations of stone resources were conducted in the La Range, Johnson Lake-Pelican Narrows-Deschambault Lake and Creighton-Amisk Lake regions of Saskatchewan. The work identified a ric

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Industrial minerals in Saskatchewan: an overview of geology, production and prospects

    By Lynn I. Kelley

    Potash is the primary industrial mineral produced in Saskatchewan, followed, in terms of gross value, by aggregate, sodium sulphate, salt, potassium sulphate, peat, clays, silica sand, calcium chlorid

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Financing considerations for the industrial minerals sector

    By Robert Halupka

    The industrial minerals sector represents a broad range of products involving a variety of technologies serving a diversity of markets and end uses. Unit values of products vary widely, reflecting the

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Aggregate resource potential mapsa planning tool useful for explorationists

    By Alex Matheson, Nick W. D. Massey, Peter T. Bobrowsky

    Crowing pressures on aggregate resources include diminishing reserves, high transportation costs, sterilization and land use conflicts. In the absence of detailed resource knowledge for a particular r

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Industrial clay resources and opportunities in Saskatchewan

    By Paul Guliov

    Industrial clays, including a variety of bentonites and kaolinbased clays in southern Saskatchewan are hosted by Late Cretaceous and Early Tertiary sediments. Ofparticular significance are the deposit

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Assaying wollastonite in skarn

    By Terence M. Gordon, Mati Raudsepp, Gregory M. Dipple

    Four methods of measuring mineral abundance in a rock are examined for their potential in assaying for high-tech industrial minerals. One method uses X-ray powder-diffraction data and the other three

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Canadian Clay Products bentonite production in Saskatchewan

    By Colin Jones

    Canadian Clay Products Inc., which mines bentonite in Saskatchewan near Truax and operates a plant at Wilcox, is the sole producer of swelling bentonite, often called western bentonite, in Canada. Sev

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Industrial kaolin resources in the Pacific Northwest and central Canada

    By Colin Harvey

    The paper industry in the Pacific Northwest is a potentially large market for industrial clays. Current trends within the paper industry towards higher quality newsprint, filled and coated papers, off

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Industrial minerals in Manitoba

    By James D. Bamburak

    Total mineral production in Manitoba has averaged C$1 billion over the past ten years. Industrial mineral production has comprised almost 10% of the total, with more than half coming from the aggregat

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Industrial minerals in Alberta

    By W. A. Dixon Edwards

    Industrial mineral production in Alberta, worth $468 million in 1997, comes from a dozen types of industrial minerals, mined by about 400 producers. Cement and lime from Paleozoic limestone formations

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Les minéraux industriels au Québec

    By Henri-Louis Jacob et Marc Bélanger

    La province de Québec est un important producteur de roches et de minéraux industriels. En 1998, la valeur de cette production se chiffrait à 1,26 milliard de dollars canadiens (données préliminaires)

    Jan 1, 2001