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  • IOM3
    Mine gas exploitation at Appin and Tower Collieries, New South Wales, Australia

    By K. C. Garner

    The visit reported was made with support from the 1997 J.C. Boyle travelling scholarship. The management and control of hazardous gases released into the underground environment are an integral part o

    Jun 21, 1905

  • IOM3
    Development of Schytill and Geldart diagrams for determining the fluidization conditions for chlorination of anatase-charcoal mixtures

    By R Adamian, F. T. Da Silva, D. H. Gameiro

    Schytill and Geldart diagrams were developed for the TiO2-C-Cl2 system at 1 073 and 1 273 K, so as to define the hypothetical relations between particle sizes and chlorine velocity for simultaneous fl

    Jun 21, 1905

  • IOM3
    Geochemistry of the British Caledonides: the setting for metallogeny

    By D. M. A. Flight, P. M. Green, J. A. Plant, P. R. Simpson

    Paper presented at Mineralisation in the Caledonides, the Mike Gallagher memorial meeting held in Edinburgh, 27-28 June 1996. The British Geological Survey's regional geochemical database is used to i

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Geology, mineralogy and genesis of gold mineralization at Calliachet-Urlar Burn, Scotland

    By R. A. D. Pattrick, R. A. F. Ixer

    Paper presented at Mineralisation in the Caledonides, the Mike Gallagher memorial meeting held in Edinburgh, 27-28 June 1996. At Calliachar Burn, 14 steeply dipping quartz-sulphide veins, with and wit

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Recycling of spent Denox catalysts

    By M. Foguenne, A. van Lierde, P. Henry

    Leaching experiments were carried out on a spent catalyst sample with a honeycomb structure, containing 47.5% Ti, 5.8% Mo, 2.7% Si, 2 035 ppm As, 52 ppm Pb and 8.8 ppm Hg. More than 93% of the Mo and

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Risk in minerals project: analysis, perception and management

    Paper presented at the UK minerals industry conference and published in: Minerals extraction towards the millennium. UK minerals industry conference, 3-5 April 1995, University of Leeds. London: Insti

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Effect of ladle additions on chemical composition of metallurgical-grade silicon

    By R. M. Cooper, H. K. Herbert, D. N. Phillips

    A study was carried out to determine the effects of adding CaCO3, Fe, Al and CaSi2 to the ladle, rather than to the raw materials, in order to increase the concentration of Ca, Fe and Al in the final

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Petrography and X-ray computerized tomography applied as an integral part of a rock mechanics investigation of discontinuities

    By R. Sweennen, A. Vervoort, J. Caers

    A case study is presented of the mechanical behaviour of fractures in the Westphalian A and B siliciclastic succession of mud-, silt- and sandstones with intercalating coal layers in the Campine basin

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Damage to underground excavations from open-pit blasting

    By A. M. Tunstall

    Aspects of blast vibrations, damage mechanisms and the influence of rock quality on damage severity are reviewed and results presented from a monitoring programme in which the rock mass rating for six

    Jun 19, 1905

  • IOM3
    Behaviour of magnesia-bearing fluxes during iron ore sintering

    By B. M. England, L. C. Mackey

    Magnesia minerals are included in most iron ore sinter mixes to provide the MgO requirements of blast furnace slag. The properties of these minerals have an influence on the eventual sintering propert

    Jun 18, 1905

  • AIME
    The Effect of Silver on the chlorination and Brornination of Gold

    By H. O. Hofman

    WHEN dry chlorine gas is made to act in the cold upon finely¬divided gold,' it converts the latter with evolution of heat into auro-auric chloride, Au2CI4, a hard, dark-red, hygroscopic salt. Moi

    Mar 1, 1905

  • AIME
    The Zinc-Smelting Industry of the Middle West

    By H. C. Meister

    THE zinc-smelting industry of the United States has grown very rapidly in recent years and bids fair to outrival that of all other countries in the future. On account of the geographical situation of

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AIME
    The Fire-Clays of Missouri

    By H. A. Wheeler

    IT may surprise some of our members to learn, among the industries based on the mineral resources of the United States that of clay now ranks third, being exceeded in value of product only by pig-iron

    Jan 1, 1905

  • AUSIMM
    Paper No. 130. Gold Dredging in Otago.

    As the chief field of the gold dredging industry in Otago is the district traversed by the Molyneux River (called above Cromwell the Clutha) and its tributaries, a brief reference to the geology of th

    Jan 1, 1903

  • AIME
    Discussions - Of Mr. Woo's Paper on Silver-Mining and Smelting in Mongolia (see p. 755)

    MR. Woo's succinct description of the mining and smelting of silver-lead in Mongolia, with the roasting-and-reduction process and cupellation, has much interest as a picture of methods that not o

    Jan 1, 1903

  • AUSIMM
    Notes on the Geology, Quartz Reefs and Minerals of the Waihi Goldfield

    The rocks of Waihi and the surrounding district are almost entirely rhyolitic and ande5itic in character. Sedimentary rocks, with the exception of some surface deposits of clay loosely compacted congl

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
    Mexican Paper - Notes on the Mines and Minerals of Guanajuato, Mexico

    By William P. Blake

    The ancient city of Guanajuato, the capital of the State of that name, has been built up and sustained chiefly by the milling industry based upon the veins of the Veta Madre and La Luz. It is distant

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME
  • AIME
    Mexican Paper - The Value of Ores in Mexico

    By N. H. Emmons

    In the United States the value of gold- and silver-ores is everywhere reckoned in ounces troy of the metal per " short ton " (2000 lbs. avoird.) of the ore. In the case of silver, which fluctuates in

    Jan 1, 1902

  • AIME