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  • CIM
    Update on Insols Flotation at Agrium’s Vanscoy Potash Plant

    By Alex Cormode, Carlos Perucca

    "Sylvinite ore from the Saskatoon area typically contains about 5% insolubles, occurring as clays and carbonates. These insoluble slimes must be removed sufficiently well to permit an efficient subseq

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    ANCIENT VOLCANOGENIC MASSIVE SULFIDE DEPOSITS IN CHINA - Geological Setting and Features of the Ashele Cu-Zn Deposit, Xinjiang, China

    By Denghong Wang

    Abstract- The Ashele Cu-Zn deposit is a recently discovered volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit in Xinjiang, China, hosted by Lower to Middle Devonian submarine bimodal volcanic rocks. The primary or

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Bubble Surface Area Flux: A Parameter to Characterize Flotation Cells

    By R. Filippone, Donald Leroux, Colin Hardie, G. Leichtle, Cesar Gomez, Jim A. Finch

    "Bubble surface area flux (Sb) is the surface area of bubbles per unit time per unit cross-sectional area of flotation machine. The units are: (m2 bubble surface/s)/(m2 cell) or s -1. For bubbles of m

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    BRAZIL - The Vazante Zinc Mine, Minas Gerais, Brazil: Constraints on Willemitic Mineralization and Fluid Evolution

    By Rodnei Graça, Jorge Silva Bettencourt, Lena Virgínia Soares Monteiro, Baruch Spiro, Tolentino Flávio De Oliveira

    Abstract - The Vazante Mine is located in the Vazante District, the largest zinc district in Brazil. The Vazante deposit consists dominantly of an unusual willemitic ore. Small sulfide bodies are tect

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Cast iron in late medieval Europe: A re-examination

    By Bert S. Hall

    "The purpose of this paper is to review the evidence at hand concerning the earliest centuries of cast iron in Europe, from roughly 1400 A.D. until the second half of the sixteenth century. For the mo

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Edward Haycock and his Gatineau Mine

    By D. D. Hogarth

    "Edward Haycock, Engineer and Public Contractor Edward Haycock was born in Shrewsbury, England, June 14, 1813. His father was John Haycock, a timber merchant and soap manufacturer, residing at Swan Hi

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Old iron nails

    By Ursula M. Franklin

    Old iron nails are one of the most common objects which entice the general public to ask questions about the history of metallurgy. There is a lot of history in old nails - history of the manufacturin

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    COLOMBIA - Colombian Emerald Reserves Inferred from Leached Beryllium of their Host Black Shale

    By Gaston Giuliani, Jérome Massot, Didier Bourlès, Lionel Siame

    "Abstract - We present a new approach for the evaluation of the potential of emerald reserves in gem projects using beryllium (Be) mobility. The distribution of Be in the different phases of hydrother

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    MODERN SEAFLOOR HYDROTHERMAL DEPOSITS - Enrichments of Platinum-group Elements in Hydrogenous, Diagenetic and Hydrothermal Marine Manganese and Iron Deposits

    By Doris Stüben, Geoffrey P. Glasby, Akira Usui, Jörg-Detlef Eckhardt, Bruce W. Mountain, Zsolt Berner

    "Abstract - Twenty-seven marine Mn and Fe deposits chosen for their diverse origins have been analyzed for five platinum-group elements (PGE). The PGE display their highest concentrations in hydrogeno

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Gold Ore Processing at the Musselwhite Mine - Feasibility, design and Operation

    By Donald Strickland, Peter Kresin, Dave Hall

    "Have your parents or grandparents ever tried to share with you their wisdom and you ignored it because it did not relate to you‘? I have been ignorant and inevitably grew older and wished I had liste

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    The smelting industry in the Lower Swansea Valley of South Wales - a brief history

    By P. J. Mackey

    "The metal producing industries in Canada and in the U.S. in many ways owe their technical beginnings to Welsh technology. The first copper smelter in Canada started in 1849-50 with a Welsh reverberat

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    The first cyanide leaching plants in Canada

    By J. E. Dutrizac, J. B. Sunstrum

    Until relatively recent times, virtually all gold was recovered by gravity and/ or amalgamation methods. Although such techniques are very effective on coarse gold, they become increasingly less usefu

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    A New Curriculum Prepares Future Engineers in Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy at Laval University

    By Daniel Hodouin, Claude Bazin, René del Villar

    "A traditional linkage has long been established at Laval University's Department of Mining & Metallurgy between the Mineral Process (MP) and the Mining Exploitation (Min) on one hand, and between the

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    ANCIENT VOLCANOGENIC MASSIVE SULFIDE DEPOSITS IN CHINA - Geochemistry of the Paleoproterozoic Metavolcanic Rocks and Relation to Cu-Fe VMS Deposits in Central Yunnan, China

    By Qidong Xu

    Abstract - The metavolcanic rocks of the Dahongshan area have been subjected to both widespread hydrothermal alteration from circulating seawater and to regional metamorphism, such that their mineralo

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Copper and nickel smelting with virtually zero gas emission — A vision for the future

    By N. A. Warner

    Virtually zero gas emission smelting is promoted as a means for securing environmental advantages and the general public’s acceptance. Concerns about climate change will increasingly make it more diff

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    CHILE - Fission Track Thermochronology of the Domeyko Cordillera, Northern Chile: Implications for Andean Tectonics and Porphyry Copper Metallogenesis

    By Victor Maksaev, Marcos Zentilli

    "Abstract - The Domeyko Cordillera, the westernmost uplifted crustal block of the composite High Andes of northern Chile (20°S to 28°S) hosts a narrow N-S trending belt of Late Eocene-Oligocene giant

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    Challenges & Improvements in Milling at Omai Gold Mines

    By Gregg Vickell

    "High tonnage, low grade gold mines such as Omai’s afford economies of scale that are unto their own insufficient to sustain profitability at today’s depressed gold price. Complimenting profitability

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    MODERN SEAFLOOR HYDROTHERMAL DEPOSITS - Conductive Heat Flow Anomalies Associated with Hydrothermal Sulfide Mounds

    By Yufeng Yao, Robert P. Lowell

    Abstract - Conductive heat flow anomalies associated with hydrothermal sulfide mounds on the seafloor have been studied. Sulfide mounds tend to focus conductive heat flow because sulfide minerals have

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    MODERN SEAFLOOR HYDROTHERMAL DEPOSITS - OCEAN RIDGES - Diffuse-flow Hydrothermal Field in an Oceanic Fracture Zone Setting, Northeast Pacific: Deposit Composition

    By James R. Hein, Jane Reid, Robert W. Embley, Se-Won Chang, Randolph A. Koski

    "Abstract - This is the first reported occurrence of an active hydrothermal field in an oceanic fracture zone setting. The hydrothermal field occurs in a pull-apart basin within the Blanco Fracture Zo

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    An historical sketch of the Canadian steel industry

    By W. M. Williams

    The Canadian steel industry is now in many ways a mature one, having achieved many technical successes during its hundred-year history. It is interesting to look back over this period, to learn someth

    Jan 1, 1999