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Give and Take: Adaptation of Worksite Culture in Canada?s Diamond MinesBy Ginger Gibson
As an occupational culture, mining comes with its own set of rules, agendas and values. Yet mines often also operate in the traditional territories of indigenous communities, with whom specific agreem
May 1, 2007
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Give Your Electrical Mining Machines a Voltage Boost! Technology Update ? Voltage Regulation Systems for Mining EquipmentBy Tim Gartner
This paper introduces a new application of a proven technology to provide dynamic, voltage regulation in underground mine electrical distribution systems. This technology acts to ?stiffen? the electri
May 1, 2003
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Gladstone Hill - Martha Hill Part IIMineralisation was identified at Gladstone Hill as far back as the late 1870's û early 1880's, shortly after the initial discovery of Martha Hill. Indeed, early recovery problems from the Ma
Jan 1, 1999
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Glass And Chemical Sand Manufacture In The Edwards Paddle ScrubberBy R. C. Edwards, Will Mitchell, T. G. Kirkland
THREE years ago, when the Process Research Laboratory at Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co. sought a remedy for the increasing cost of disposing of great quantities of spent sands from foundries, R. C.
Jan 1, 1952
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Glass Containers From Varying Industrial Mineral Sources ? IntroductionBy William W. Kephart
Brockway Glass Company, Inc., manufactures glass containers at fourteen plants located in nine states. The relatively high place value of the major glass batch components dictates that raw material su
Jan 1, 1973
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Glass Earth Gold Exploration: Combining Geoinformatics Data InterventionBy J Cahill, D Holden, R Stuart, G Cryan, W Power, W Stratford, S Garwin
The combination of Stage 1 Geoinformatics legacy data intervention processes with the Stage 2 ultra-detailed airborne geophysical prospecting demonstrates a new approach to converting data to informat
Jan 1, 2005
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Glass Earth Gold Exploration: Ground-Truthing of Targets Identified from Ultra-Detailed Geophysical Prospecting Leads to a New Rhyolitic Epithermal Gold Discovery?By N Hungerford, A Coote, S Doyle, D Henderson, F Della-Pasqua
A systematic, detailed airborne geophysical programme carried out in the Taupo Volcanic Region (TVR) in 2005 by Glass Earth NZ Ltd culminated in the identification of 21 epithermal gold targets. In th
Jan 1, 2006
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Glass Earth's Greenfields Gold Discovery Strategy Using Multi-Faceted Airborne Geophysical Surveying is Poised to Rewrite the Geology Of Central OtagoBy S Henderson
The Otago Goldfield has produced approximately 8 million ounces of alluvial gold and over 2.5 million ounces of hard rock gold and is currently home to New ZealandÆs largest producing gold mine. In th
Jan 1, 2007
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Glass fibre cable bolts - an alternativeBy D. A. Peterson, R. Pakalnis, G. Peter Mah
"Laboratory and trial installations have been completed to determine the potential of composite cable bolt reinforcement in Canadian underground mines. Several prototypes of glass fibre cable bolts ha
Jan 1, 1994
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Glass Mine ModelsBy Ednlund D. North
Discussion of the paper of Edmund D. North, presented at the Spokane meeting, September, 1909, and published in Bulletin No. 37, January, 1910, pp. 21 to 25. A. SCOTT REID, London, Eng. (communicat
May 1, 1910
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Glass Mine-Models.By EDBIUND U. NORTH
IN making a glass model of mine-workings, each mine will present some little individualities, to meet which will call for the exercise of special ingenuity. Having made several models, I offer the fol
Jan 1, 1910
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Glass Raw Materials (416d8cfc-e929-44d0-a5da-db0815ccb363)By H. N. Mills
The glass industry is a major user of many industrial minerals in the manufacture of its product. It is the intent of this chapter to: (1) acquaint the reader with the glass industry by including a fe
Jan 1, 1983
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Glass Raw MaterialsBy H. N. Mills
The glass industry is a major user of many industrial minerals in the manufacture of its product. It is the intent of this chapter to: (1) acquaint the reader with the glass industry by including a fe
Jan 1, 1975
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Glass Raw Materials (3da30a01-e86d-4824-b9b6-6681c2ba294b)By H. Lyn Bourne
Daily everyone depends on the great variety of glass products, so much so that glass is often taken for granted. In fact most people do not realize how versatile glass has become. Consider the various
Jan 1, 1994
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Glass RecyclingBy W. L. Dalmijn
Glass recycling in the Netherlands 'has grown fr.om 10.000 to 300.000 tonnes per annum. The various advantages and problems of the glass cycle with reference to the state of the art in the Nether
Jan 1, 1995
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Glass Sand And A Glass Industry In Puerto RicoBy J. Earl Frazier, Howard A. Meyerhoff
IT is not known when silica sand was first noticed along the north coast of Puerto Rico, but the first mention of its occurrence was made in 1922, by N. L. Britton,1 who described its presence in isol
Jan 1, 1945
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Glass Sand Prospects And ExplorationBy Thomas E. Shufflebarger
Definition of glass sand prospects may be modified by constraints which range from demography to critically important product-control. Characteristics of usable raw materials, physical and chemical,
Jan 1, 1983
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Glassfill — An environmental alternative for waste glass disposalBy D. DeGagne, E. De Souza, J. F. Archibald
This paper describes the potential use of anew agent material for backfill consolidation, ground waste glass, to be used as partial replacement of Portland cement fractions within backfill. Significan
Jan 1, 1997
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GlauconiteBy Frank J. Markewicz, William Lodding
Greensand, greensand marl, and green earth are names given to sediments rich in the bluish green to greenish black mineral known as glauconite by the mineralogist. The word glauconite is from the Gree
Jan 1, 1975
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Glauconite (90472e3b-b168-4708-9a15-ec6aeb9e860c)By John Hower, Frank J. Markewicz, William Lodding
Greensand, greensand marl, and green earth are names given to sediments rich in the bluish green to greenish black mineral known as glauconite by the mineralogist. The word glauconite is from the Gree
Jan 1, 1983