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In Situ Measurements of High Frequency Electrical Conductivity and Permittivity of Oil ShaleBy R. J. Lytle, E. F. Laine
The in situ high frequency electrical conductivity and permittivity of Colorado oil shale were recently measured. The measurements were made at 45 MHz (45 million cps) by transmitting from one borehol
Jan 1, 1983
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The Drift Of Things (2becf2f3-a505-4766-8d17-2700672cf253)By John V. Beall
On January 1, 1948, we boarded the cage at 7 a.m. and were dropped to the 900 level of the Brunswick shaft. The previous evening, we had attended the New Year's party at the Miners' Guild Ha
Jan 1, 1971
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Longhole Drilling Raises Successful At HoldenBy Joseph A. Newman
THE first trial of longhole drilling of raises began in June 1949 at the Holden mine, Chelan Div., Howe Sound Co. The cost of this raise was about the same as the average cost of raising by normal met
Jan 10, 1951
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Guide To Selecting Optimum Spacing For Levels And RaisesBy Koehler S. Stout
At today's mineral prices, unproductive or low productive work in any underground mine must be kept at a minimum to insure a profit. Improper level and raise spacing can be one of the contributin
Jan 11, 1962
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Experimental Flotation of Oxidized Silver OresBy H. S. Gieser
THE flotation of oxidized silver, ores offers an interesting problem to the operating metallurgist, who has to treat this material. The advances made in the art of selective flotation by the use of ne
Jan 1, 1931
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Endowment Funds (592bfeb7-63bf-4ac1-b062-09e84cfd781f)The income of the Institute is derived from dues, subscriptions to MINING AND METALLURGY and sale of publications. These sources are fortunately supplemented by the interest from invested funds now am
Jan 1, 1934
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Importance Of Mineral Fuels In The Central United States[based on o report by HUBERT E. RISSER] There is a tendency among laymen to relegate America's coal industry to Pennsylvania and West Virginia, completely overlooking-or unaware of- the vast r
Jan 6, 1965
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SilverBy Robert H. Leach
SILVER the whitest of all metals, has been used for thousands of years. Students of antiquity agree that silver, gold, copper, and their alloys were the first metals discovered by man and they have al
Jan 1, 1953
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Rock Bolt Reinforcement System To Stabilise Shaft Intersections And Pit Bottom Roadways During Underground ReconstructionBy Ali M. Heidarieh Zadeh, Raghu N. Singh
The paper presents a stability investigation of shaft intersections and pit bottom roadways in the vicinity of upcast and downcast shafts at a colliery in the U.K. Aschemeof instrumentation was aimed
Jan 1, 1982
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Mining Methods and Costs at Presidio Mine of The-American Metal Co. of TexasBy Howbert Van Dyne
THE Presidio mine of The American Metal Co. is situated in the "Big Bend" region, some 45 miles over state highway south of Marfa, a station on the Southern Pacific R.R. It lies 20 miles by road north
Jan 1, 1930
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Mobility Analysis of Bucket Wheel Excavators Operating on Copper Mill TailingsBy L. L. Karafiath, S. G. Vick, E. A. Nowatzki
Computer analyses of the trafficability of copper mine tailings by four different commercially available BWEs were performed. A mathematical model incorporating the tailings' Coulomb strength par
Jan 1, 1982
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Colorado Paper - Laboratory Note on the Heat-Conductivity, Expansion and Fusibility of Fire-Brick (see Discussion, 1060)By J. D. Pennock
The different samples of brick examined were Grecian magnesite, American magnesite; silica brick and coke-oven tiling made in Belgium and used in retort coke-ovens. The Grecian magnesite was furnis
Jan 1, 1897
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Stability Of Slopes In Discontinuously Jointed RockBy Thomas M. Tharp
INTRODUCTION Attempts to analyze the stability of slopes, foundations and underground openings in discontinuously jointed rock have generally assumed full joint continuity or ignored the role of s
Jan 1, 1984
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Mineralogical Variations During Comminution of Complex Sulfide OresBy Woo-Zin Choi, Ting Chuen Pong, Roe-Hoan Yoon, James R. Craig, Robert M. Haralick
Detailed analysis by conventional techniques and by the General Image Processing System (GIPSY) has revealed that the conmunution of base metal-containing, complex, fine-grained sulfide ores results i
Jan 1, 1984
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Geochemical Exploration Continues Expansion At A Rapid PaceBy Wayne S. Cavender
During the past year, geochemical prospecting appears to have come of age as an exploration method, and its acceptance by the mining industry is widespread. There is a growing recognition that applied
Jan 2, 1968
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Oil Shale Mining and the EnvironmentBy T. A. Kauppila, V. Rajaram, R. L. Bolmer
With steadily increasing prices for imported oil, commercial production of oil from oil shale can become a reality in the near future. Presently we are importing about 43% of our oil needs and this re
Jan 4, 1978
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Improve Your Capital Equipment Decisions!By A. Bruce Matthews
Of the many opportunities in the mining industry to invest funds to improve operations, there is always some limit in every company as to how much can be spent each year for the acquisition of capital
Jan 3, 1963
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Single-Stage Flotation of Alkali Feldspars, Ilmenite, Rutile, Garnet, and Monazite, with Mixed Cationic/Anionic CollectorsBy R. McEwen, G. W. Hansen, G. F. Lee
The effect of using an anionic collector, Reagent 308, a sodium petroleum sulfonate, with a cationic collector, Armac T, a tallow, fatty acid amine acetate, was studied in a series of monomineralic fl
Jan 1, 1977
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Production - Domestic - Oil and Gas Development in Kentucky during 1942By Louise Barton Freeman, Iley B. Browning, Coleman D. Hunter
During 1942, production of oil in Kentucky reached a total of 4,169,163 bbl. of which 1,807,809 bbl. came from eastern Kentucky. This was more than a million barrels less than in 1941, owing partly to
Jan 1, 1943