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Reconnaissance Exploration, Search Theory, And Stopping Criteria
By M. J. Shulman
With the spiraling cost of exploration, all stages of exploration must be optimized. Search theory calculates the optimal distribution of effort by maximizing the probability of discovery under the co
Jan 1, 1986
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Reconstructing Soils After Surface .Mining of Prime Agricultural Land
By I. J. Jansen
Introduction The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act (PL 95-87) lays a new challenge before the surface mining industry by requiring that prime farmlands must be reclaimed to equivalent or hig
Jan 1, 1982
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Reconstruction Methods of the ?Hecla? Electrical-Mechanical Equipment
By A. C. Stevenson
IN OUTLINING the various steps taken and the exigences met during the time of unwatering and rebuilding the burnt top equipment at the Hecla mine, the major portion of the detail is omitted and a gene
Jan 1, 1924
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Record Activity in the Illinois-Kentucky Fluorspar District - How the Mineral Was Found - What It Is Used For -Why the Industry Is Booming
By Sidney Snook
FLUORSPAR production is the most important industry in a compact area in southern Illinois and western Kentucky bordering the Ohio River. Producers' activities do not usually figure much in the m
Jan 1, 1940
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Record Attendance at New York Coal Division
By Eugene McAuliffe
THE Coal Division undertook its most ambitious program this year at the New York meeting, with six full' sessions and a luncheon on Monday which had a record attendance and at which the newly ele
Jan 1, 1936
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Record Breaking AMC Show Proves Industry Vitality
Some 30,000 people attended from 50 countries. Over 600 exhibitors brought with them a billion dollars of mining technology, ranging from tiny high-precision valves to giant off-highway trucks. Twenty
Jan 11, 1978
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Record-Breaking Attendance Expected at Tenth Offshore Technology in Conference in Houston, May 8-11
Representatives from 100 countries will focus on aspects of energy, ocean mining, safety, and manpower training at Houston's Astrodomain.
Jan 4, 1978
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Recording of Roof Subsidence
By H. Landsberg
SUBSIDENCE caused by mining operations has been a matter of interest for the mining engineer for just 111 years, since the Belgian Committee for study of subsidence in the city of Liege submitted its
Jan 1, 1936
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Recording Pyrometry
By C. O. Fairchild
ONE of the fundamental principles of efficiency is the use of adequate and permanent records. The rapid increase in the manufacture and use of recording pryometers is a proof of the appreciation of ef
Jan 9, 1919
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Recording Pyrometry - Discussion
R. W. NEWCOMB,* New York, N. Y. (written discussiont).-On page 1638 mention is made of a new -instrument with an exceptionally high resistance that has been developed by Charles Engelhard. All frictio
Jan 12, 1919
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Recording Thermocouple Pyrometers
By Leo Behr
RECENT years have seen important practical advances in the construction of recording instruments for use with thermocouples. The difficulties of the problem will be appreciated when it is remembered t
Jan 9, 1919
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Recording Thermocouple Pyrometers ? Discussion
R. W. NEWCOMB, New York, N. Y. (written discussion *).-In this paper, the author has enumerated the various sources of error that may, under certain conditions, develop in instruments of the direct-de
Jan 12, 1919
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Records Of Black Hawk Operations At Mogollon
By Wilford S. Wright
FOR the past four years the management of the Black Hawk Consolidated Mines plant at Mogollon has conscientiously kept accurate records pertaining to cost of operation and the performance of certain e
Jan 1, 1943
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Recoverable Reserves Estimation - The Geostatistical Approach (2d979d85-65c8-454d-a0eb-69128ed47171)
By A. G. Journel
Accurate prediction of recoverable reserves are key to the development and planning of a mining operation. Recovery functions for tonnage, quantity of metal, and ore grade are defined and two approach
Jan 1, 1986
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Recovering and Interpreting Diamond-Core-Drill Samples
By Robert D. Longyear
IN MOST diamond core drilling the primary objective is the recovery of samples to be used for chemical analysis, physical tests, or visual inspection. Unless these samples are reliable and the informa
Jan 1, 1937
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Recovering Fine-Size Coal from Alabama Washer Wastes Using Humphreys Spiral (74c21011-80c8-4eb1-abad-b657833f3ad4)
By James S. Browning
The Mineral Resources Institute and State Mine Experiment Station of the University of Alabama conducted Humphreys spiral tests on fine coal waste from nine preparation plants of Alabama strip mining
Jan 1, 1980
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Recovering Gold from Copper Mill Tailing
By E. W. Enqelmann
DURING January, 1933, burlap or coco matting was placed in the bottom of launders handling various products of the flotation plant of the Magna mill of the Utah Copper Co., with the hope of increasing
Jan 1, 1935
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Recovering Gold From Shut Down Gold Treatment Plants
By C. M. Kleeman
All mines have a finite life and the time comes when the ore is depleted, or it has become uneconomical, or for some other reason which may be peculiar to that particular mine, it must be shut down. T
Jan 1, 1981
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Recovering Selenium from Copper Anode Slimes
By N. C. Nissen, J. A. Thomas, A. Illis, K. N. Subramanian
Successful miniplant and laboratory testwork has indicated that high purity selenium can be produced from copper refinery slimes. The recovery technique fits into existing unit operations, and the sel
Jan 11, 1978
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Recovering Selenium From Sandstone Ores Of New Mexico
By Roshan B. Bhappu
Selenium is found most frequently as an accessory mineral in the ores of lead, copper, and nickel, and is recoverable as a byproduct in the treatment of many of the ores of these metals. The geographi
Jan 8, 1962