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Propeller-type Fans for Mine VentilationBy T. H. Troller
FOR a long time propeller-type fans have been considered a very adequate means to move great quantities of air against small static pres-sures. They have been in use for this purpose in mines, as well
Jan 1, 1936
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A Precise Manometer for Ventilation MeasurementsBy Walter Weeks
THERE is very little useful material in the litera-ture on the construction of manometers, so each experimenter must devise his own instrument. I have experimented for a number of years and have final
Jan 1, 1923
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Rock Support For Nuclear Waste RepositoriesBy Lee W. Abramson
INTRODUCTION The design of rock support for underground nuclear waste repositories requires consideration of special construction and operation requirements, and of the adverse environmental condi
Jan 1, 1984
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Stockpile Designs For Unit Train LoadingsBy Charles E. Packard
Many coal producers have been faced recently with the problem of arranging their production facilities to accommodate recent trends in the transportation of their product. Each operator is normally fa
Jan 8, 1964
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Polar Charts for Interpreting Magnetic AnomaliesBy Sylvain Pirson
THE main value of earth magnetic measurements, outside of certain mining problems, resides in the study of deeply buried tectonic phe-nomena related to regional and local geology. Magnetic surveys are
Jan 1, 1935
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Some Constitutive Equations For Rock MaterialsBy Giovanni Barla
In engineering analyses, rock is frequently treated as a homogeneous, isotropic, and linearly elastic medium. However, rock material exhibits, in most cases, physical nonlinearity, time-dependency, an
Jan 1, 1970
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Topographic Maps For The Mining Engineer.By E. G. Woodruff
(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) FEW authors of treatises and papers on engineering subjects have . given adequate attention to topographic maps.. The statement applies especially to mining engineering
Jan 6, 1913
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Stabilizing Agglomerated Slimes for Cyanide LeachingBy Orson Shepard
THE leaching method that was first widely used with the cyanide process consisted of percolation leaching of crushed ore in vats or leaching tanks. It was frequently necessary to separate the sand for
Jan 1, 1937
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Testing Ores for the Small OperatorBy L. O. Howard
TWO or three years ago there were submitted to me some reports of tests that had been made on a semi-oxidized ore of silver looking to its treat-ment by combined flotation and cyanidation, together wi
Jan 12, 1927
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A Design for More Effective ProrationBy Joseph Pogue
OVER a period of years the writer has presented a number of studies1 on various aspects of proration, in a progressive attempt to analyze critically and constructively the economic complexities of thi
Jan 1, 1939
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Grinding of Anthracite for Pulverized FuelBy C. H. Frick
BEFORE presenting the main topic, as indicated by the title, this paper will give some of the high-spot history of the anthracite industry. INTRODUCTION The earliest recorded use of anthracite w
Jan 1, 1946
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Technical Notes - Crystallographic Angles for TinBy J. F. Nicholas
THE angles between the crystallographic planes in cubic metals were originally given by Bozorth and have been republished many times. Recently, Salkovitz2 tabulated the angles for the hexagonal metals
Jan 1, 1952
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Processing Gypsum For End Use MarketsBy E. J. Hammer
Crushing and grinding of gypsum demands con- trolled processing to a fineness suitable for further treatment of the mineral into end products, and into various sizes of material which are themselves s
Jan 1, 1970
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Production Control Program for February MeetingBy O. E. Kiessling
THIS announcement of the topics relating to production control, which the Committee hopes to have discussed at the February meeting, supplements the preliminary announcement published in the November
Jan 1, 1929
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Electrical Apparatus For Surface Mining OperationsBy E. C. Rien
When the electrical system for a surface or open pit mine is designed, four major considerations should be satisfied in the following order: safety, reliability, flexibility, and cost. Careful plannin
Jan 1, 1968
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The Contract Wage System for MinesBy A. K. Knickerbocker
PRACTICALLY all underground work on the Minnesota iron ranges is done by miners working on a so-called contract wage system. This system, while it has certain advantages over the straight day's p
Jan 2, 1920
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Backed-up Mills for Continuous RollingBy Lloyd Jones
THE strip industry made rapid strides in regard to both width and gage until about 1922, when the maximum width was about 20 in. In the hot mills, strips of thin gages in wide widths could be pro-duce
Jan 3, 1928
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LimeBy Kenneth A. Gutschick, Robert S. Boynton
Lime has become a general and loosely used term to denote almost any kind of calcareous material or finely divided form of limestone or dolomite, as well as burned forms of lime. However, according to
Jan 1, 1975
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Fundamental Basis For Classification Of EmployeesThe plan for establishing relations of American industry with national labor on a definite basis so closely follows the channels of the efforts of Engineering Council, principally in the classificatio
Jan 6, 1919
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Preliminary Investigation of Tailings for RetreatmentBy I. L. Box
IN planning retreatment of tailings, the material to be retreated should be thoroughly investigated, tak- ing into consideration the total tonnage, the blende content, the specific gravity of the di
Jan 7, 1928