Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Measurement of Ball Size Distribution in a 8 m x 5 m Primary Mill of Sarcheshmeh Copper MineBy M. Pourkani, M. Karga, Samid Banis, Andre Laplante, G. Langari-Zadeh
"The Sarcheshmeh mine processes 40,000 t/d of ore grading 0.9% Cu and 0.035% Mo. Grinding is effected in single stage ball mills using 80 mm forged steel balls, with an average consumption of 850 g/t.
Jan 1, 1999
-
On the early use of iron in the ArcticBy Michael L. Wayman
Archaeological and ethnographic work during the last century has shown clearly that metals have played a small but important role in prehistoric Arctic cultures. For at least the past several millenia
Jan 1, 1999
-
An Oriented Explosion Damming in Mudanjiang River No 2 Power Plant in 1979By D P. Yang, Yang R. G
The laws of throwing and heaping of engineering blast are important for making use of throwing and heaping of thrown body to form certain shape, such as building dams by directional blast. The article
Jan 1, 1999
-
Recent Operation And Environmental Control In The Kennecott SmelterBy C. J. Newman
The new Kennecott Utah Copper smelter, started in 1995, was designed to be the cleanest smelter environmentally in the world. The plant is operating at production rates above the original design capac
Jan 1, 1999
-
In-Situ FT-IR/IRS and MLRS Examination of Adsorbed Oleate at Fluorite and Calcite SurfacesBy C. A. Young, J. D. Miller
Adsorption isotherms previously determined by in-situ Fourier transform infrared/internal reflection spectroscopy (FT-IR/IRS) for oleate adsorption at calcite and fluorite surfaces near pH 9 and at va
Jan 1, 1999
-
Study of a Two-Stage Smelting Reduction Process for Ironmaking by a Thermochemical ModelA thermochemical model is developed to study the two-stage smelting reduction process for ironmaking without post-combustion. Steady-state multi-material and heat balance equations are solved simult
Jan 1, 1999
-
Floodplain Aggregate Mining In Western Oregon (2ca5f679-fd59-4011-96c0-926073fa7dc9)By E. F. Schnitzer, S. R. Mamoyac, P. J. Wampler
During 1996 and 1997, Oregon experienced flooding on a scale not seen in many years. Some gravel pits located near rivers experienced erosion and, in several cases, breaches between the gravel pit an
Jan 1, 1999
-
Plant-Site Evaluations Of The OPSA System For On-Line Particle Size Measurement From Moving Belt ConveyorsBy Y. K. Yen, J. D. Miller, C. L. Lin
The image-based On-line Particle Size Analyzer (OPSA)system has been developed at the University of Utah to measure particle size distributions under plant conditions where overlapped and segregated p
Jan 1, 1999
-
Recovery of Antimony from Process SolutionsBy M. K. Mohan
During the processing of metals like Cu, Ni, Co, large quantities of solutions, which contain co- products such as Sb, Cd, Pb etc. are generated. These solutions if processed to recover the metals hel
Jan 1, 1999
-
Modern Mine Closure in New Zealand - The Golden Cross Case StudyMine closure is a legitimate element of the mining cycle and like mine development involves technical planning, permitting, and finally construction. Closure begins with the mine's operational fo
Jan 1, 1999
-
Concentration And Characterization Of Rutile From A Feldspar (Albite) Flotation Reject Stream --A Laboratory StudyBy Mustafa Akser
Dwindling economic deposits of rutile (TiO2) prompted research on recovering it from secondary sources. One such resource is in Southwestern Turkey feldspar mining rejects that contain 5%-6% TiO2 most
Jan 1, 1999
-
Adobe/Earthen Construction On The Northern Plains: Empowering Standing Rock Sioux Housing ChoicesBy David A. Holmes
After a century of variable government-supplied housing on their cold, windswept lands, and facing extremely limited natural resources and no timber, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe has launched a study
Jan 1, 1999
-
Modeling of energy parameters ERR and TESR around burst- prone mine openingsBy R. Simon
Strain-burst phenomena are generally characterised by sudden releases of energy in a volume of highly stressed rock. Strain bursts are encountered in situations such as crown pillar bursts during cut-
Jan 1, 1999
-
The early history of electrorefining in CanadaBy D. J. MacKinnon
"The Canadian Copper Company, formed in 1885, began mining the nickel-copper ores of Sudbury in 1887 and producing nickel-copper matte from its smelter in 1888(1). Although it was quickly appreciated
Jan 1, 1999
-
The Role Of Engineering And Geology In Analyzing Ground Control ConditionsBy David A. Newman
Severe roof control problems have plagued a West Virginia underground mine since its initial development in the late 1970's. Adverse roof conditions in the Eastern portion of the reserve result f
Jan 1, 1999
-
Shaft Sinking on the MetroWest Water Supply Tunnel ProjectBy A. J. Stewart, M. Guay, J. W. Critchfield, A. P. Hoddeson
The MetroWest Water Supply Tunnel project includes three main work shafts, excavated primarily in rock. Shaft L is 9.8 m (32 ft) diameter and 124.1 m (407 ft)deep. Shaft E is 7.0 by 12.8 m (23 by 42 f
Jan 1, 1999
-
A Mathematical Model to Study Filtration Efficiency of Ceramic Foam FiltersBy A. H. Castillejos E., F. A. Acosta G.
Filtration is widely used as a terminal refining step for metals, particularly for the casting of aluminum alloys, but still more knowledge is required to understand how several factors affect the eff
Jan 1, 1999
-
Explosive Use for Avalanche ControlBy Don Bachman, Larry Heywood
Artificial release of snow avalanches, through the use of explosives, is a necessary component of safety planning and operations for ski areas throughout the Western United States, as well as in other
Jan 1, 1999
-
Blasting to the Rescue, Underwater Concrete Bridge-Pier DemolitionBy Jerry Wallace
A highway bridge demolition project to allow shipping access to a new container port in Puget Sound ran into trouble when contract-stipulated mechanical means of demolition failed. Blasting was then e
Jan 1, 1999
-
Tailing Dam Failures – Why Do They Continue To Occur?By D. R. East
Recent experiences within certain sectors of the international mining industry suggest an underestimation of the environmental risk associated with the design of mine waste management facilities. The
Jan 1, 1999