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IC 6612 Gold Mining And Milling Methods And Costs At The Vallecito Western Drift Mine, Angels Camp, Calif. ? IntroductionBy Don Steffa
Drift mining, according to California mining terminology - and it is distinctly a California development - is the blocking out and extraction (breasting) of the auriferous gravels of an ancient buried
Jan 1, 1932
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Geographic Distribution Of World Mineral ProductionBy John W. Frey
[Minerals, generally of great geological age, are to a very large extent the material basis of what we know as modern civilization. In most of the so-called civilized world the use f minerals has beco
Jan 1, 1932
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RI 3189 Falls Of Roof And Coal In The Book Cliffs And Wasatch Plateau Coal Fields Of UtahBy Herbert Tomlinson
The United States Bureau of Mines has engaged in a study of the conditions under which coal mine accidents, resulting in the loss of life, limb, or time to the injured person, occur from falls of roof
Jan 1, 1932
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RI 3168 The Determination Of Volatile Matter In Low-Temperature Cokes, Chars, And Noncoking CoalsBy H. M. Cooper
Many analysts have had difficulty in obtaining accurate and consistent determinations of the volatile matter in low-temperature coke when the usual standard method for coal was followed. The tendency
Jan 1, 1932
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Friability, Slacking Characteristics, Low-Temperature Carbonization Assay And Agglutinating Value Of Washington And Other Coals ? IntroductionBy H. F. Yancey
One of the important duties of the Bureau of Mines is to sample and analyze coals and to publish the results of such analyses for the information of producers, consumers, and the general public. Numer
Jan 1, 1932
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Analyses Of Montana Coals - Montana Coal Fields - LocationBy C. E. Dobbin
The coal fields of Montana are widely distributed through the plains region in the eastern and northern parts of the State, and the mountain regions in the central, southern, and southwestern parts of
Jan 1, 1932
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Gold Mining And Milling In The United States And Canada - Current Practices And Costs ? IntroductionBy Charles F. Jackson
Gold mining is a subject that not only appeals to the popular imagination but has vital importance to the world's economic structure. However, a discussion of the use of gold as a medium of excha
Jan 1, 1932
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Mining Gilsonite in UtahBy RUSSELL C. FLEMING
GILSONITE is a brilliant black, tarry-like bitumen, classed technically with glance pitch and graharnite as an asphaltite. As found it is brittle, breaking much like ice, and has a conchoidal fracture
Jan 1, 1932
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The Institute in Its Relation to the Mineral IndustryBy Robert E. Tally
THE membership of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers is composed largely of technicians, operating engineers, and executives in the mining, metallurgical and petroleum indust
Jan 1, 1932
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Economic Survey of Bituminous CoalBy W. A. Forbes
OUR present-day geological surveys show that 36 of our States are underlain with bituminous coal, covering a total area of 496,709 square miles. The North American continent possesses 69 per cent of t
Jan 1, 1932
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Work of Prospectors and Geologist: ReviewedBy AIME AIME
MINING geology was granted two sessions, Wednesday morning and afternoon, Feb. 17. The morning session, at which H. Foster Bain presided. first considered Paul M. Tyler's paper, "Economic Notes o
Jan 1, 1932
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Mineral Industry Education Division Succeeds. CommitteeBy Charles H. Fulton
THE Engineering Education group began its sessions Tuesday morning, Feb. 16, as a Committee and wound up the day as the Institute's fifth " Division." C.II. Fulton presided. The first paper for d
Jan 1, 1932
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With My Husband in Soviet RussiaBy Sallie McCabe Johnson
LIFE IN RUSSIA for the foreign woman is hard. It is up to her whether her days are spent in tearful longing for ironic or whether she :hakes the real effort to ferret out the interesting or amusing si
Jan 1, 1932
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Bituminous Coal, and Scientific ResearchBy A. W. Gauger
WITHOUT QUESTION the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania contains the most remarkable coal deposits of the whole world. Within its borders ,are to be found excellent coals ranging in rank from the high volat
Jan 1, 1932
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A Mill for the Small Gold Mine?By John A. Baker
S EVERAL FACTORS have brought about a vastly greater interest in the gold-mining industry in the last two or three years. Outstanding is the fact that there is an open market at a fixed price for all
Jan 1, 1932
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Possibility of Electrochemical Industries at Hoover DamBy Jay A. Carpenter
IN six years the construction of Hoover Dam and the power plants probably will have reached the operating stage and this vast new source of power will then be continuously available for industry. The
Jan 1, 1932
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The Depression Gold RushBy J. B. Knaebel, M. W. Von Bernewitz
OUTSTANDING FACTORS that have largely induced the current great interest in the reopening of old mines and the search for new deposits are the increased relative value of gold, the certainty of a mark
Jan 1, 1932
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Section Delegates Talk Things OverBy AIME AIME
NO FEATURE of the annual meeting is considered more important at Institute headquarters than the assembly of delegates from the various local sections and divisions. There the president of the Institu
Jan 1, 1932
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Gold: Its Production and MarketingBy F. W. Bradley
GOLD is a large subject. One could talk about its geological or mineralogical occurrences, prospect- i11.g for it, mining of .it, its metallurgy or its marketing; but I have decided to limit my discus
Jan 1, 1932
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Explosive Shattering of Minerals Feature of Milling SessionsBy AIME AIME
THE MILLING PROGRAM on Monday required a morning and afternoon session with a special luncheon of the Milling Committee in the Engineers Club at noon. Grinding and flotation were the main subjects of
Jan 1, 1932