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  • AUSIMM
    How Are We Going to Produce Our Future Resource Professionals?

    The closure of the only professional mining school in New Zealand will mean that the minerals industry will have to explore other options to fill their mining professional positions. Globally mining i

    Jan 1, 1997

  • SME
    How Blasthole Shock Absorbers Reduce Costs

    By Jack T. Work

    Spiraling costs in every segment of the open-pit mining cycle is a fact of life that every operator must reckon with. The introduction of various shock absorbing devices for rotary drilling is one rec

    Jan 4, 1980

  • AUSIMM
    How Can You Get Mining Equipment to Work to its Real Capacity?

    Most mining operations have been happy to live in blissful ignorance of what their equipment is really capable of. Shareholders have been shown increasing tonnes output per employee (due to rationalis

    Jan 1, 2009

  • AIME
    How Computerized Instrumentation Monitors Coal Mine Roofs

    By Maynard O. Serbousek, James R. McVey

    IS there a quick way of assessing the conditions of a newly exposed roof in a coal mine? This has always been a nagging question. The problem is that unless effective controls are established as soon

    Jan 9, 1976

  • SAIMM
    How Do Bacteria Interact With Minerals?

    Sulphide minerals, such as pyrite and sphalerite, are leached by ferric sulphate. This reaction produces ferrous sulphate and other dissolved products. The ferrous sulphate is re-oxidized to ferric su

    Jan 1, 2000

  • SME
    How Do We Promote Mining? Educate Teachers – They Educate Students

    By Dan Witkowsky

    For the 36th consecutive summer, the Colorado Mining Association Education Foundation and the Colorado School of Mines have sponsored “A Total Concept of the Mining Industry” for kindergarten through

    Jan 1, 2004

  • SME
    How Does Limestone Rock Dust Prevent Coal Dust Explosions In Coal Mines? - Preprint 09-050

    By C. K. Man

    Coal dust explosions in underground coal mines are prevented by generous application of rock dust (usually limestone). If an explosion should occur, the rock dust disperses, mixes with the coal dust a

    Jan 1, 2009

  • SAIMM
    How Effective Is The Non-Destructive Examination Of Multi-Layer, Low Rotation Winding Ropes?

    The paper reviews the results emanating from an experiment conducted in Bochum?Germany in which various international rope inspection authorities were requested to assess the conditions of a corroded

    Jan 1, 2000

  • SAIMM
    How Electronics Can Release the Imagination

    By G. V. R. Landman

    It is self-evident that economic pressure demands that today?s mines stay ahead and stay competitive. The challenge, however, isto find fresh approaches to the pursuit of efficiency and operational ef

    Jan 1, 2010

  • SAIMM
    How fine particles on haematite mineral ultimately define the mineral surface charge and the overall floatability behaviour - Synopsis

    By S. Montes

    Mineral floatability is strongly connected with mineral structure and composition. The complexity of mineral surfaces has meant that few attempts have been made to understand the effect of impurities

    Jan 1, 2007

  • CIM
    How Many Samples are Enough? Theoretical Determination of the Critical Sampling Density for a Greek Clay Quarry.

    By Konstantinos Modis

    According to recently established theoretical analysis and under certain conditions, a critical sampling density can be determined for an earth-related space-distributed natural variable. Sampling abo

    Oct 1, 2009

  • CIM
    How much is TOO much? A statistical look at bench flotation data and re-circulating chemical concentrations

    By Thomas R. Larson

    "Many concentrators use re-circulating “plant” water for dilution in their flotation circuits. However, if crusher dust suppressants, ball mill grinding aids, or even agitator bearing grease are intro

    Jan 1, 2002

  • SME
    How Much Testing Should I Do? Are The Samples Really Representative?

    By R. W. Smith, D. L. Taylor, K. A. Altman

    Recent research has shown that traditional sensitivity, what if and best case/worst case analysis of metallurgical data has the potential to over estimate the value of mining projects. Use of simulat

    Jan 1, 2000

  • AUSIMM
    How Particles Stick to Bubbles - The Influence of pH and Hydrophobicity in Flotation

    How Particles Stick to Bubbles - The Influence of pH and Hydrophobicity in Flotation

    Sep 13, 2010

  • SME
    How Safe Are Your Recent Mills? The Compatibility Between FEA And Welding Codes

    By V. Svalbonas, M. Fresko

    The present versions of the Welding Codes, such as BS7608, have long been known to be compatible with hand computations of membrane and bending stress, rather than detailed finite element solutions.

    Jan 1, 2002

  • CIM
    How Should Mining Companies Select the Optimal Portfolio of Production Projects Considering the Risk of their NPV

    By Júlio C. Lúcio

    Consider the case of a mining company with N investment opportunities in projects of different commodities. The problem is: since the company has limitation of capital, equipments, technical staffs, e

    May 1, 2009

  • NIOSH
    How Silicosis and Coal Workers' Pneumoconiosis Develop – A Cellular Assessment

    By V. Castranova

    "A pneumoconiosis is best defined as the accumulation of dust in the lungs and the tissue's reaction to iu presence. Thus, silicosis is the name given to the fibrotic disease of the lungs caused by in

    Nov 1, 1995

  • NIOSH
    How Smoke Hinders Escape From Coal Mine

    By F. N. Kissell, C. D. Litton

    Abstract-This study predicts the level of smoke that miners might meet while trying to escape a coal mine fire and describes how smoke would impede their safe escape. For this study, the authors assum

  • SME
    How Smoke Hinders Escape From Coal Mine Fires

    By F. N. Kissell, C. D. Litton

    This study predicts the level of smoke that miners might meet while trying to escape a coal mine fire and describes how smoke would impede their safe escape. For this study, the authors assumed that m

    Jan 1, 1993

  • CIM
    How the Mining Industry is Responding to Pressures for Change in the Management of Mine Waste

    By Don Welch

    Pressures for change ?Land use constraints ?Project financing ?Local communities ?Environmental issues ?Sustainability requirements ?Stricter regulatory procedures ?Technical excellence ?Reduc

    May 1, 2010