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  • CIM
    How Mining Companies Improve Share Price by Destroying Shareholder Value Or - How the Junior Geologist and Engineer Determine the CEO?s Bonus

    By Brian Hall

    For some years, the mining industry has been consistently delivering returns below the market average. One of the causes is a disconnect between what is perceived to drive value creation by many indus

    May 1, 2003

  • AIME
    How Mining Firms View Engineering Contractors

    By Barbara L. Lakin, Sherman K. Okun

    According to a recent market survey, the quality and ability of key personnel, plus past performance on the job, rank high as criteria used by mining companies when selecting a project engineering con

    Jan 9, 1977

  • AUSIMM
    How Mining is Catching Up

    In terms of tunnelling the mining industry is generally thought of as the crude cousin of the civil construction industry. Mining has tended to concentrate on speed and flexibility rather than the hig

    Jan 1, 1999

  • AIME
    How Mining Will Be Demonstrated at the-New Chicago Museum

    By JOHN A. MALONEY

    AS noted in the February issue of MINING AND METALLURGY, an advisory committee to the Museum of Science and Industry of Chicago was authorized by the Institute's Board of Directors, with W. R. Wr

    Jan 1, 1932

  • IMPC
    How Much can We Afford to Invest?

    By H. Allenius

    Today, most requests for quotations force all bidders to follow the bid document to the letter. The choice is then made based on price since it is the only difference in technically identical offers.

    Jan 1, 2014

  • AIME
    How Much Coal Do We Really Have? The Need for an Up-to-date Survey

    By Andrew B. Crichton

    THE oft repeated statements of the United States Geological Survey and the Bureau of Mines that the coal reserves in the United States are sufficient for 3000 yr have given us all a sense of security

    Jan 1, 1948

  • AUSIMM
    How Much Do We Need to Drill?

    By C Taylor, E Retz

    Sequential Gaussian conditional simulation of wide-spaced exploration data has been completed in order to optimise a drilling grid at Fortescue’s Eliwana deposit. The aim of this drill grid is to impr

    Jul 13, 2015

  • SME
    How Much Gas Hydrates Can Sediment Host? Characteristics Affecting Sediment?s Store Capacity

    By D. Marinakis

    Gas hydrates (GH) are crystalline compounds consisting of a water molecule lattice, in the cages of which suitably sized molecules, such as methane or other light hydrocarbons, are confined. Although

    Jan 1, 2006

  • 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

  • AIME
    How Much Repairs Really Cost

    Why should I pay $8.50 an hour for dealer repairs when my own mechanics work for $3.50?" The numbers vary, but that's the argument most contractors use to justify doing their own repairs. They do

    Jan 1, 1970

  • 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

  • AIME
    How New and Better Industrial Explosives Are Meeting All Wartime Demands

    By N. G. Johnson

    ALL of us are only too familiar with the fact that first the defense program, and finally the war, required vastly increased production from existing sources, and the discovery and development of new

    Jan 1, 1944

  • SME
    How New Trackless Mining Equipment Improved Costs At Minerva's Underground Fluorspar And Zinc Mining Operations - Introduction

    By Robert T. Chapman

    Many of us are privileged in that we have witnessed the transition from mining methods used in the first quarter of the twentieth' century to those practiced today. In the late Twenties, for exam

    Jan 1, 1966

  • AIME
    How One Company Appraises Management Development Programs

    By Carl E. Reistle

    ENGINEERS as a group are often criticized because they have been responsible for the development of many technical improvements only to allow the administration of them to pass into the hands of other

    Jan 8, 1954

  • CIM
    How One Sell-Side Analyst Values Mining Stocks

    By Greg Barnes

    Agenda ? The Mining Stock Life Cycle ? Current Environment ? Valuation ? Golds ? Valuation ? Base Metals ? Case Study ? Quebrada Blanca Hypogene Commodity Investment Cycle ? Macro-Economic Indi

    May 1, 2010

  • AUSIMM
    How Ore Deposits can be Overestimated Through Computational Methods

    By Watson DF

    Calculation of the amount of metal in an ore deposit or mining block should be approached by multiplication and integration of appropriate numerical manifolds describing the spatial distribution of

    Jan 1, 1987

  • 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

  • AIME
    How Petroleum Engineers Can Help the Industry

    By JOHN R. SUMAN

    I WOULD like to spend a few minutes describing to you the present condition which exists in the oil industry and then point out some aspects of this deplorable situation in which I think petroleum eng

    Jan 1, 1931

  • AIME
    How Policies Affect the Rates of Recovery from Mineral Sources

    By John Lohrenz

    Consider an investor who, knowing future costs and revenues, can choose how rapidly to produce from a given mineral source. If the investor elects to make that choice to maximize present value of futu

    Jan 1, 1982

  • SME
    How Power And Gas Demand Control Systems Can Help Mills Cut Utility Costs

    By Bates H. Murphy

    There is one quick way to substantially reduce the operating cost of a great many pining operations. It is to cut the demand charge on the use of electricity and gas. Demand charge is the utility comp

    Jan 1, 1974