Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Machine-Bored Tunnel And Raises: Their Application To Underground MiningBy R. J. Robbins, D. L. Anderson
A tunnel boring machine has potential use in al- most any type of mining where the access shaft (or adit) is large enough or can be made large enough for its initial entry and where the orebody is of
Jan 7, 1967
-
Relation Of Magnetic Susceptibility To Mineral CompositionBy David R. Mitchell, Ernest M. Spokes
INFORMATION on magnetic properties of minerals other than magnetite is scanty and some- times erroneous. Often there is no information at all. W. R. Crane's table of tractive forces published in
Jan 3, 1958
-
Getting Real World Signals From The Underground Mine Into The ComputerBy Spencer R. Persik, Richard E. Munz
Measurements of many physical properties within an underground mine may be required as inputs to computer programs. These may be as simple as running/ not running signals from equipment, or they, may
Jan 1, 1983
-
Polyurethane Aids Roof Control In Longwall Mining At Island Creek Coal CompanyBy B. Rao Pothini, Hilmar A. von Schonfeldt
One of the key elements essential to a productive and uninterrupted longwall mining operation is roof control. In several of the Island Creek Coal Company's mining sections, polyurethane has been
Jan 1, 1981
-
The Genesis of Asbestos and Asbestiform MineralBy Stephen Taber
INTRODUCTION THE term asbestos, as commonly used, includes half a dozen minerals all having a well-developed fibrous structure, but differing in chemical composition and in some of their physical, pr
Jan 10, 1916
-
World War II And Its AftermathBy Robert Glass Cleland
THE OUTBREAK of World War II found Phelps Dodge, thanks to both foresight and good fortune, in a position to increase production of its mines and factories to meet the insatiable military and domestic
Jan 1, 1952
-
Geothermal Heat Shows Possible Use in the Fiji IslandsBy J. N. Munro
At the present stage of geothermal technology and the still limited applications of geothermal energy, most of us consider any use of "things geothermal" to be something out of the ordinary. If in suc
Jan 9, 1964
-
Mine ManagementBy Gloyd M. Wiles
Since D. C. Jackling was famous for his adeptness at organizing and training teams of operating personnel, the subject of mine management is particularly appropriate for a Jackling Lecture. In fact, i
Jan 5, 1962
-
Ertsberg-A Gigantic Base Metal OutcropBy A. Blake Caldwell
In 1936 the Ertsberg story began and its development is a classic example of the courage it takes to discover one mining prospect and bring it into production. Truly, the finding and working of this m
Jan 1, 1970
-
Manufacture Of Tunasten Carbide Tipped Drill SteelBy T. A. O’Hara
SINCE May 1948, when tungsten carbide bits were introduced at the Flin Flon mine, they have been popular with the miners because of their fast drilling speed and low gage loss. The high cost of commer
Jan 3, 1954
-
Buffalo Paper - A Present Need in the Engineering ProfessionBy William B. Potter
We have come together on this occasion, as so often before the members of the Institute have met in friendly council, to hear and discuss whatever investigation, observation, and experience during the
Jan 1, 1889
-
Virginia Beach Paper - Discussion (continued) : The Physics of Steel (see vol xxiii., p. 608)Albert SauveuR, South Chicago, Ill. (communication to the Secretary): Mr. Howe remarks (nuns., xxiii., 656) that, running through my paper, there is a tacit assumption that there is a constant and kno
Jan 1, 1895
-
Long-Hole Mining Methods - The New Horadiam Method of Mining at Copper Mountain (T. P. 1914, Mining Tech., Sept. 1945).By C. H. Brehaut, W. N. Taylor, R. S. Douglas, H. A. Shannon
The name for this new method of mining is derived from a composition of Horizontal, Radial, Diamond, and the drilling is from raises. This method, worked out at Copper Mountain, B.C., is believed to b
Jan 1, 1946
-
Institute of Metals Division - Some Recovery Characteristics of Zone-Melted IronBy J. T. Michalak, H. W. Paxton
The recovery of the initial flow stress of poly-crystalline iron is characterized by a) a logarithmic time dependence; b) an increasing activation energy with increasing recovery; c) an increased ?,at
Jan 1, 1962
-
The Use Of The Microscope In Mining Engineering.By Frederick Apgar
(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) THE valuable results that have followed the application in recent years of microscopic methods of research to problems of ore genesis have been significant, but possibl
Jan 6, 1913
-
Glen Summit Paper - Centrifugal VentilatorsBy R. Van A. Norris
Although mechanical appliances for the ventilation of mines have been known siuce very early times (one being mentioned in Agricola's De Re Metnllica, 1657), it is only within the last forty year
Jan 1, 1892
-
Use of Laboratory Methods to Quantify Dust Suppressant EffectivenessBy T. Cuscino, D. D. Lane, C. Cowherd, T. E. Baxter
Three types of commercially-available dust suppressants, commonly used in the surface mining industry to control fugitive particulate emissions from unpaved roads, were tested in the laboratory for co
Jan 1, 1984
-
Michilla: A Chilean Desert Blossoms into A Habitable Industrial CompoundBy Rafael Errazuriz
About eighty miles north of the city of Antofagasta, Chile, located just below the Tropic of Capricorn, there spreads a wide desert area where copper oxide outcrops can be seen with the naked eye. Num
Jan 8, 1973
-
Pillar Extraction in the Pittsburgh Seam With Continuous MinersBy W. E. Hess
At the Vesta mines of Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. on the Monongahela River, 35 miles south of Pittsburgh, JCM Joy continuous miners and 6-SC shuttle cars are used for pillar extraction in the Pittsbu
Jan 2, 1955
-
Hydrolytic Stripping Of Versatic Acid Solutions Containing Iron And Other MetalsBy F. M. Doyle-Garner, A. J. Monhemius
Hydrolytic stripping is the process whereby metal ions in a loaded solvent extractant are hydrolyzed by water, typically at 130°C to 200°C (265°F to 392°F). Equilibrium hydrolytic stripping tests were
Jan 1, 1986