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  • CIM
    Design Guidelines for Permanent Tunnel Plugs

    By Brennan Lang

    Why Seal Tunnels? ?Restore groundwater levels to pre-mining conditions. ?Saturate rock mass to reduce acid rock drainage. ?Reduce discharge flow to the environment. ?Reduce or regulate flows to a

    May 1, 2002

  • CIM
    Whitewood Mine

    By Howard Keele

    "The Whitewood Mine near Edmonton, Alberta, is owned by TransAlta Utilities Corporation and operated by Manalta Coal Ltd. Approximately 2 million tonnes of sub-bituminous coal is supplied annually to

    Jan 1, 1985

  • CIM
    Surveys at Great Bear Lake, 1931

    By Roderick C. McDonald

    Great Bear lake, the fourth largest body of water on this continent, comprises an area of approximately 12,000 square miles, and is set astride the Arctic circle, with a large portion of it witnessing

    Jan 1, 1932

  • CIM
    Remotely Controlled Mining Equipment for Subsea and Submerged Inland Deposits

    By S. Kapusniak

    Specialist Machine Developments (SMD) is a design and manufacturing company involved in the design of Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROV?s), ploughs, trenchers and mining machines for use in submerged en

    Aug 1, 2013

  • CIM
    Are High-Heat-Producing Granites Essential to the Origin of Giant Lead-Zinc Deposits at Mount Isa and McArthur River, Australia? (1992 Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum)

    By M. Solomon

    Giant, sediment-hosted lead-zinc deposits in northern Australia fonned during development of Mid-Proterozoic extensional basins that overlie Lower Proterozoic basement. The basement in the Mount Isa a

    Jan 1, 1992

  • CIM
    Mines and Mining in Spain

    By E. S. Moore

    To properly understand industrial conditions in Spain it is necessary to consider the early history of the country. Spain is very backward in many lines. They use the sickle for cutting grain, and plo

    Jan 1, 1927

  • CIM
    The Ventilation Challenge ? A Canadian Perspective on Maintaining A Good Working Environment in Deep Mines

    By Stephen G. Hardcastle

    Worldwide, metal mines are going deeper. For example in Canada there are six such mechanized mines planning production at 3000m (10,000?). Working at such depths challenges all aspects of mining inclu

    May 1, 2003

  • CIM
    World Class Remote Control Systems

    By Joseph Sawicz

    By now, the concept of remotely controlling heavy equipment in underground mines has become commonplace. Personnel safety is the biggest justifier for remote control, followed by an inherent cost savi

    Apr 1, 2005

  • CIM
    Mineral resources in Canada?s future

    By P. L. Drake

    This paper comprises a discussion of the role which mineral resources will play in Canada's future export trade and the growing demand for minerals in Canada.

    Jan 1, 1979

  • CIM
    Arsine Risk Management at CCR’s Electrolyte Purification Plant

    By A. Majumdar, B. Servière, H. Persson

    The CCR refinery, which was built in 1931, treats both internal and third party copper anodes to produce 325,000 mt of copper as cathodes. These anodes contain high levels of impurities, such as Ni, A

    Jan 1, 2019

  • CIM
    Earthquakes the Province and of Quebec

    By H. W. McGerrigle

    The St. Lawrence Valley of Quebec lies in an earthquake danger zone, the main centers of which appear to be Murray Bay, Montreal and Quebec City. This paper compares conditions in this "earthquake zon

    Jan 1, 1966

  • CIM
    Manganese and its importance to nineteenth-century metallurgy

    By W. M. Williams

    "Although manganese is a metal virtually unknown to the layman, it is hardly necessary to point out to the engineer the importance of manganese in modern metallurgy, an importance intimately linked wi

    Jan 1, 1999

  • CIM
    The Evolution of Materials for Pipeline Applications

    By D. Embury

    The construction and utilization of oil and gas pipelines is a vital aspect of the Canadian economy. The evolution of materials for this application can be considered as part of an evolutionary proces

    Jan 1, 2005

  • CIM
    Crack Detection and Seal-Lock Casting Repair

    By E. Ettles

    This paper features some of the spectacular new advances in the fields of fluorescent penetrant inspection and magnetic particle concentration. Casting fractures in the various stages -before the repa

    Jan 1, 1971

  • CIM
    Metal recycling and waste treatment in Japan

    By Masafumi Maeda

    Metal recycling and waste treatment have become common issues in various metal industries, notably, the iron and steelmaking industry and the nonferrous industry. The former tends to treat mass wastes

    Jan 1, 2004

  • CIM
    Problems of the Coal Industry in British Columbia

    By Charles W. Villiers

    AS is well known, there are large and valuable deposits of coal in British Columbia, both on the mainland and on Vancouver island. These deposits are widely distributed over the Province. The chief so

    Jan 1, 1936

  • CIM
    Current Canadian Government Programs to Reduce Emissions of Greenhouse Gases

    By Roy Sage

    Overview ? History ? background to current programs ? Kyoto status ? Support for technology development ? Support for GHG reduction ? Sources of information History ? 1988 - Toronto Conference

    Nov 1, 2002

  • CIM
    Mining and Agriculture: A Cross-Sector Call for Collaboration in the Management of Water

    Mining Impact in Water Quality: Understanding the conflict Mining is an industrial process Metal mines that chemically process ore to concentrate metals such as copper and gold use more water than

    May 1, 2013

  • CIM
    Water Recycling Methods Implemented at the Roy Lloyd Gold Mine Experience Gained and Future Plans

    By R. C. Snider

    The Roy Lloyd Mine in northern Saskatchewan is a high-grade underground gold mine which is currently supplying ore to Golden Band Resources Inc. (Golden Band)?s Jolu mill. Prior to the operation of th

    Nov 1, 2011

  • CIM
    The Evolution of Canadian Mining: Innovation for Survival and Growth

    ?It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.? Charles Darwin. Canada?s mining and exploration companies have evolv

    Aug 1, 2013