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Building An Industrial Mineral Plant Outside The United States Or Canada - A Case Study In MexicoBy Joseph P. Nugent
The new combination gypsum plaster and gypsum wallboard plant of Compania Industrial Kaiser S.A., the first of its kind in Mexico went into production in April of 1969. This was approximately fourteen
Jan 1, 1969
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Recovery Of Anthracite From Preparation Plant TailingsBy M. S. Klima
Tests were conducted to investigate the potential for recovering anthracite from preparation plant tailings. Samples were collected from tailings streams or slurry ponds of several anthracite cleaning
Jan 1, 1995
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Review Of Richmond Hill Copper Elution Operations - SME Annual Meeting 2022By S. Dixon
The use of warm (40-50°C) solution for the selective elution (pre-strip) of copper cyanide from gold and silver cyanides adsorbed on activated carbon was found to elute +90% of the adsorbed copper com
Mar 2, 2022
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Profile, Strain, And Time Characteristics Of Subsidence From Coal Mining In IllinoisBy Robert A. Bauer
Two basic types of subsidence occur in Illinois: pit and sag / trough. Pits develop over mines less than 165 feet deep and where relatively incompetent strata are found over the mines. Sag subsidence
Jan 1, 1982
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Mine closure: a conceptual reviewBy H. M. Lima, P. Wathern
There are many different words to describe mine closure, including rehabilitation, reclamation, restoration and decommissioning. Closing mining operations, mainly open pit mines, has required resoluti
Jan 1, 2000
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Talc (ffc68a18-b4da-4482-b12f-35c803c5e8f4)By Noel A. Genco, Edward F. McCarthy, Robert J. Piniazkiewicz
Talc, when it can be isolated as a pure mineral, has a composition of 63.36% SiO2, 31.89% MgO, and 4.75% H,O. However, as a commercial commodity less than half of all talc sold has a purity exceeding
Jan 1, 1994
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Reading And Converting Sensor Signals To Digital Computer Language - IntroductionBy J. B. Moritz
From the beginning, man has concerned himself with the task of controlling the elements and forces about him so as to provide a better and easier life. In the accomplishment of this task, he is requir
Jan 1, 1965
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Water Granulation And Transportation Of Blast Furnace Slag At Atlantic Cement Company's Sparrows Point, Maryland PlantBy Thomas Hard
A description is given of a new facility processing blast furnace slag into a high quality cementitious material to be used as an ingredient in concrete for general construction purposes. A brief hist
Jan 1, 1983
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The Sequential Copper Analysis Method-Geological, Mineralogical, And Metallurgical ImplicationsBy G. A. Parkison
The sequential copper analysis method is a particularly useful technique to semi-quantitatively define the geologic, mineralogic, and metallurgical types and zonations commonly associated with porphyr
Jan 1, 1995
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Phosphate Raw Materials Of TennesseeBy Robert E. Hershey
The phosphate industry is the fourth-ranking mineral industry in Tennessee; it has an annual value of 13,000,000 and a yearly production of almost 2,000,000 tons of phosphate ore. Tennessee, at presen
Jan 1, 1960
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Coal Demand During the 1970?s For Electrical Power GenerationBy Richard L. Gordon
At almost no time since the end of World War I has the coal industry been free from serious threats to its competitive position. At present, the critical question is whether the industry can maintain
Jan 1, 1971
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The Syngenetic Massive Sulphide Deposits ? IntroductionBy G. W. Mannard
The large massive sulphide deposits present a formidable challenge to the economic geologist. They represent such huge concentrations of iron, sulphur, base metals and precious metals that it is diffi
Jan 1, 1973
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An Overview Of Industrial Minerals For Oil And Gas Drilling And Stimulation OperationsBy Hugh D. Olmstead
Typical operations necessary to develop oil and gas reservoirs are reviewed, including exploration, drilling, cementing, completion, work over, sand control, stimulation, enhanced recovery and product
Jan 1, 1983
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Tracking Mine Seeps, In Situ Leach Solutions, And Pollution Plumes Using ElectromagneticsBy J. R. Montgomery, T. A. Phillips, F. Blackham, D. J. Adams
Underground water, whether it is a mine seep, in situ leach solution, or a pollution plume, is difficult to track and monitor. Monitoring wells are costly to drill and may be placed in the wrong spot
Jan 1, 1996
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Some Industrial Experiences In Utilizing Electrochemical And Chelation Sulfide Mineral CollectorsBy R. R. Klimpel
Over the last six years, several new commercial families of sulfide mineral collectors have been developed. This paper summarizes some plant data and use experiences gained with each of these product
Jan 1, 1995
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Role Of Microbe-Mineral Interactions In Seafloor Gas Hydrate AccumulationsBy Rudy Rogers
When Gas hydrate formation rates have two steps: a nucleation induction step and an agglomeration step. Hydrate induction in distilled water is extremely slow because of lack of nucleating particles
Jan 1, 2008
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Contractor uses innovative techniques on Seattle project"There is no fast way to add more than 6.4 km (4 miles) of track, most of it underground, to the Sound Transit Link Light Rail system in the Seattle, WA area. But increasingly busy traffic through a n
Dec 1, 2016
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Plant Design for Gold to Reduce the Use of Mercury in Artisanal Mining in Segovia Region in the NE of ColombiaBy O. J. R. Baena
Mining activity in the Segovia region in NE Colombia is the main source of employment in the local economy. This has created major problems of illegality and informality mining associated with a high
Feb 23, 2014
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Pulp Density Measurement And ControlBy L. E. Sausa
Measuring the specific gravity of a pulp in concentrating plants is a relative, y simple procedure, but the desired accuracy is often difficult to attain. Many plants use the system of weighing a know
Jan 1, 1960
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Nacl-naocl Lixiviant For Precious MetalsBy David R. Baughman, Ray V. Huff, Paul D. Chamberlin
ISL Ventures, Inc. (ISLV) is developing a process for recovering gold and silver from ores using a chloride-hypochlorite lixiviant. The leach solution, composed of water, NaCl and NaOCl, is maintained
Jan 1, 1999