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  • NIOSH
    Quarry Accidents In The United States During The Calendar Year 1936 - Introduction

    By William W. Adams

    The stone-quarrying and related industries of the United States made large gains in employment in 1936 over 1935, according to reports furnished by operating companies to the Bureau of Mines, United S

    Jan 1, 1938

  • NIOSH
    Quarry Accidents In The United States During The Calendar Year 1938 - Introduction

    By William W. Adams

    The quarrying and related industries of the United States improved their safety record in 1938 by reducing their accident-frequency rate to a lower acid more favorable position than it has occupied at

    Jan 1, 1940

  • NIOSH
    Quarry Accidents In The United States During The Calendar Year 1939 - Introduction

    By William W. Adams

    Progress made by the quarrying and related industries of the United States during 1939 included increases in the number of men employed and the number of man-hours worked and reductions in the death a

    Jan 1, 1941

  • NIOSH
    Quarry Accidents In The United States During The Calendar Year 1941 - Introduction

    By William W. Adams

    A general increase in employment prevailed in the stone-quarrying industry of the United States during 1941 compared with 1940. Likewise, more accidents occurred to men working in and about the quarri

    Jan 1, 1943

  • SME
    Quick-Erect Stopping System for Radiation Protection and Mine Rescue in Small-scale Mining "Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration (2020)"

    By JÖRG DEHNERT, PETER WINDISCH, Bernd Schönherrt, JENS STOPP

    The Quick-Erect Stopping System (QESS) offers a new way of reducing the radon exposures of miners in Germany, especially during remediation work in old mines. The QESS is a light-weight, modular, and

    Jul 23, 2020

  • AIME
    Quicksilver

    By C. N. Schuette

    THE producers of this liquid metal call it quicksilver, while the consumer generally refers to it as mercury. It is one of he seven metals that were known to the ancients. These seven were gold, silve

    Jan 1, 1953

  • DFI
    R C Harris Water Filtration Plant Expansion - Excavation Support Design, Installation and Performance

    By Michael Cianchetti, Nadir Ansari, Matthew Janes

    "PROJECT DESCRIPTIONThe R C Harris Filtration Plant underwent an expansion to install an underground sludge treatment capability consisting of a series of underground tanks within stepped excavations

    Jan 1, 2007

  • SME
    Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Applications In Mining

    By D. Puckett

    The feasibility of maintaining equipment location, personnel location and vital statistics in surface and underground mining operations has increased with advances in radio frequency identification (R

    Jan 1, 1996

  • CIM
    Radioisotope Gauging ? the 1n Mining Industry

    By Bruce W. Smith

    Non-contacting, radioisotope density and level gauges are discussed. The characteristics of the more commonly used isotopes, the techniques of detection and the methods of presenting information are r

    Jan 1, 1964

  • AIME
    Radium

    By Moore, Richard B

    PROBABLY no other metal excites as much interest, among both scientific men and the general public, as radium. This is due partly to the high cost of radium salts and partly to the peculiar properties

    Jan 8, 1918

  • AIME
    Radium and Silver at Great Bear Lake

    By Hugh S. Spence

    IN MAY, 1930, G. LaBine and E. C. St. Paul, prospect¬ing round the southeastern shore of Great Bear Lake, in the North West Territories of Canada, discovered pitchblende at what is now LaBine Point. A

    Jan 1, 1932

  • CIM
    Raising a Blind Shaft Between Two Submarine Coal Seams (297edc53-3f33-4275-8620-82ccd0512a9f)

    By Jos. Kalbhenn

    MR. G. G. BOWSER: Mr. Kalbhenn's paper is an excellent one and is a concise description of a very interesting piece of work. It is well known that a great deal of preliminary study was given to

    Jan 1, 1944

  • SME
    Rare Earth Resources Of North America

    By S. B. Castor

    Although production generally satisfies demand for rare earths, new markets may make undeveloped resources, particularly those rich in yttrium, more interesting. A Precambrian carbonalite orebody at M

    Jan 1, 1991

  • TMS
    Rare Earths And Rechargeables - The Role Of Ree's In Reversible Metal Hydrides

    By G. D. Sandrock

    The science and technology of roan temperature rechargeable metal hydrides began about 1969 with the discoveries that the intermetallic Compounds LaNi5 and TiFe could be, conveniently hydrided and deh

    Jan 1, 1992

  • CIM
    Rates of Return in the Canadian Mining Industry ? A Comparative Study

    By Mitchell P. Rothman

    This paper concentrates on profits and other measures of return in the Canadian mining industry, especially in the non-mineral-fuels sector. The paper examines the historical patterns of mining profit

    Jan 1, 1977

  • SAIMM
    Raw Material and Process Sampling

    By Maggi Loubser

    "In a technologically advanced era, where process control is accurately maintained within the smallest error margins, and accuracy and precision are continuously improved, sampling is still left to th

    Jan 1, 2014

  • AIME
    Raymond Frank Baker ? Director, AIME, 1945-1947

    By AIME

    AS with Phil Kraft, referred to on this page last month, travel has always held a great fascination for Raymond Frank Baker and for that reason he determined to become a geologist. He had heard that g

    Jan 1, 1947

  • CIM
    Re-Emergence of Resin in Pulp With Strong Base Resins as a Low-Cost, Technically Viable Process for Uranium Recovery

    By C. Fleming, J. R. Goode

    ABSTRACT: Data were produced from two uranium project studies that were conducted in 2008, both involving uranium recovery from leached slurry by resin-in-pulp (RIP) with strong base resins. In both s

    Jan 1, 2011

  • AIME
    Readjustment in the Coal Industry

    By T. H. Watkins

    COAL is the basis upon which the activities of the industrial nations of the world rest today. In order that the coal industry may bee restored to a reasonably healthy condition, it is essential that

    Jan 2, 1922

  • SME
    Reaffecting Previously Mined Areas: Remining ? Introduction

    By L. B. Phelps

    The nation is confronted with thousands of acres of abandoned coal lands. In Pennsylvania alone, these lands have been estimated to cost $15 billion to reclaim (Pennsylvania Bulletin, 1985). One way t

    Jan 1, 1987