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  • NIOSH
    Back Injury Control Measures For Manual Lifting And Seat Design

    By S. Gallagher, A. G. Mayton

    Back injuries account for a high proportion of lost workdays in the mining industry and are a leading cause of disability in mine workers. Two risk factors for low back injuries are manual lifting and

  • SME
    Back Injury Control Measures For Manual Lifting And Seat Design (713e5a18-b501-4cad-ba17-ce99f61f5c68)

    By S. Gallagher, A. Mayton

    Introduction The mining industry has long been associated with a high incidence of low back disorders and pain (Klein et al. 1984, Leigh and Sheetz 1989, Brinckmann et al. 1998). It is believed th

    Jan 1, 2007

  • ISEE
    Back to Basics in Drilling Safety

    By John Brown

    Let’s talk about things that you, the driIl boss, the pit boss and the driller can do to eliminate the trend in drilling related accidents that have come to plague our industry in recent years. My pap

    Jan 1, 2000

  • AUSIMM
    Back to basics: resourcing the mining industry

    By S Dunbar, S Harrison, J Cilliers

    ‘Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.’George Santayana (16 December 1863 in Madrid, Spain to 26 September 1952 in Rome, Italy). Philosopher, essayist, poet and novelist.The m

    Aug 29, 2018

  • ISEE
    Back to School on Construction Blasting, Rules of Thumb Revisited

    By Jerry Wallace

    Construction of a new grammar school required blasting within three meters of the existing school. Due to changes not anticipated at time of bid opening, blasting had to take place while approximately

    Jan 1, 2001

  • CIM
    Back to the Basics in Process Control

    By A. Vien, B. C. Flintoff, R. P. Edwards

    "A major thrust in industrial automation over the past few years has been the exploration and incorporation of higher level (supervisory and optimizing) control strategies aimed at more fully exploiti

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SME
    Back To The Basics In Process Control (bf65ca3d-296a-41ae-b421-98a0cdd41f9f)

    By A. Vien

    A major thrust in Industrial automation over the past few years has been the exploration and incorporation of higher level (supervisory and optimizing) control strategies aimed at more fully exploitin

    Jan 1, 1998

  • ISEE
    Back to the Basics: Electronic Detonators

    By Larry Schneider

    In recent years, many individuals looking into the future of the blasting industry have predicted that the most likely next technological breakthrough would be the use of high precision, digitally con

    Jan 1, 2006

  • ISEE
    Back to the Basics; Nonelectric Initiation Shock Tube Systems Part 2: Safety Considerations

    By Larry Schneider

    "0 ne of the incentives that led to the development of non-electric shock tube initiation systems was the desire within the industry to improve detonator safety. And to the extent that nonelectric ini

    Jan 1, 1995

  • ISEE
    Back to the Basics; Nonelectric Initiation Shock Tube Systems, Part 2: General Applications

    By Larry Schneider

    I n the simplest application of a shock tube initiation system, the tubing acts as a “relay line” which passes a detonation signal from borehole to borehole. When the signal arrives at each borehole,

    Jan 1, 1995

  • IOM3
    Back to the future

    By G W. Clamp

    The most traum atic event within the lUK coal industry during the last 30 years was its privatisation. Who were the relatively unknown people from RJB: white knights or robber barons? This paper highl

    Jan 8, 1997

  • AUSIMM
    Back to the Future - Why Change Doesn't Necessarily Mean Progress

    By P A. Tilyard

    There have been enormous changes in mineral processing in the past four decades. For example grinding mill power has increased by an order of magnitude, regrinding is done to -10 microns and flotation

    Jan 1, 2009

  • AUSIMM
    Backfill Alternatives for Regional Support in Ultra-Depth South African Gold Mines

    By G York

    South African gold reserves extend to great depths. However, strategies for the mining of such deposits have changed only slightly over the past number of years. Regional support at depth is currently

    Jan 1, 1998

  • SAIMM
    Backfill heat load contribution in deep level mining operations

    By C. A. Rawlins

    In an underground mine the ingress of heat can generally be attributed to two sources (Rock exposure and artificial mechanisms). The heat load relating rock exposure is subdivided into stoping [~40%]

    Jan 1, 2003

  • CIM
    Backfill Practice at Copper Cliff North Mine (CCNM)

    By Ike Isagon

    Backfilling has become an integral process in underground mining operations, with varying cost-effective forms of application. This study is a part of an overall investigation into the backfill practi

    May 1, 2011

  • AUSIMM
    Backfill Technology Development at Xstrata Mount Isa Mines Between 1995 and 2005

    By L Neindorf

    The development and application of paste fill, cement slurry aggregate fill and shotcrete bulkheads at Mount Isa Mines is described. The progressive changes in filling style in the Mount Isa copper mi

    Jan 1, 2005

  • AUSIMM
    Backfill ù The Environmentally Friendly Tailings Disposal System

    By A G. Grice

    Surface disposal of mining processing wastes is usually perceived as an undesirable consequence of meeting societyÆs needs for metals and minerals. Environmental disasters associated with the discharg

    Jan 1, 2002

  • AUSIMM
    Backfill: An Integral Component of Mine Production

    By D Morrison

    Backfill is usually considered a necessary evil that contributes little to the principal objective of the operation, ore production. Consequently, it is relegated to an auxiliary role in the operation

    Jan 1, 1998

  • CIM
    Backfilling at the Sullivan Mine

    By C. D. M. Chisholm

    IN discussing stope filling, or backfilling, at the Sullivan mine, at Kimberley, B.C., a brief description of the problem will first be presented. The Sullivan orebody is a replacement in quartzite, w

    Jan 1, 1941

  • NIOSH
    Backfilling Of Cavities Resulting From Borehole Mining - Objective

    As part of the overall development of a borehole mining system -develop backfilling techniques to reduce possible damage to the environment caused by either the cavities or the piles of sand tailings

    Jan 1, 1981