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Hardness Changes Accompanying The Ordering Of Beta Brass (79f40f83-24bd-4902-8000-e167d007b4b3)By Cyril Stanley Smith
BETA brass (consisting of approximately equal atomic proportions of copper and zinc) exists as a random solid solution at high temperatures, but at low temperatures [ ] an ordered structure is stabl
Jan 1, 1942
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Distributive And Supervisory Process Control As Applied To Copper Smelting OperationsBy E. L. Brack
ASARCO's copper smelter at Hayden, Arizona has been upgraded to meet the increasing Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) environmental st
Jan 1, 1984
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German Engineers Develop Conveyors That "Twist"By Gerd L. Klinkenborg
Ever see a curvaceous conveyor belt? Reports from Europe indicate appreciable interest in a relatively new system that has revamped some of the concepts of what single-belt conveyors can and cannot do
Jan 1, 1962
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Choosing The Proper Borehole Size For Bench BlastingBy James J. Olson, Richard A. Dick
Blasting practices have shown a recent trend toward larger blastholes and larger burdens and spacings, although some operators, after reconsidering the situation have gone back to smaller blasthole si
Jan 3, 1972
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Crushing And Grinding Practices Vary But Autogenous Grinding Continues To Gain AdherentsBy Bertrand Robinson
Epitomized, there have been no innovations recently in crushing, but in grinding the trend has been towards larger units under more automatic control with an increased use of autogenous grinding. C
Jan 1, 1970
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Reserves, Resources and Pie-In-The-SkyBy K. A. Grace
Reserves are the basic foundation of any mining enterprise, but a lack of understanding of the concept of resources and reserves is still a frequent cause of failure in mining ventures. A review of th
Jan 1, 1985
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Mill Design for the Seventies (118e9ac5-f676-4aa8-b511-4ad25fe20ad5)By Allan D. Taylor, Robert S. Shoemaker
Adopting as a principle the phrase "the mill of yesterday should not be built with the high cost money of today," the authors have designed a hypothetical concentrator which could be built for a typic
Jan 1, 1973
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Computer Scheduling Of Furnace Product Withdrawal And Servicing OperationsBy S. F. Turcotte, B. J. Grierson
At the Q. I. T. ilmenite smelter, nine electric furnaces produce titania slag and iron At high power levels, a furnace requires either a slag or an iron tap approximately once an hour, using rail cars
Jan 1, 1969
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Performance Of Lamella Thickeners™ In Coal Preparation Plants (540a2d53-f93f-4261-9536-a463ab1ad29b)By John J. Childress, Russell L. Cook
Stringent environmental regulations, which have limited the use of sludge ponds, coupled with the economic incentive to clean more coal or to add fine coal cleaning additions to existing preparation p
Jan 1, 1979
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Rock Mechanics Study of a Longwall Panel (38558a62-2c03-4977-88bf-d88b2ec6ed76)By Peter J. Conroy, Lewis V. Wade
Old Ben Coal Co. successfully completed the fit longwall panel in Illinois. The panel was mined wing shield supports and was part of a cooperative agreement with the US Bureau of Mines. This paper des
Jan 1, 1981
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Today and Tomorrow in British ColumbiaBy Charles H. Mitchell
British Columbia is enjoying a period of sustained high-level activity in all aspects and sectors of its mining industry. The total value of mineral production for 1962 was in excess of $229 million.
Jan 12, 1963
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Automatic Thickener Control at Marmora MineBy W. M. Aubrey
Lying approximately 110 miles east of Toronto, Canada, the Marmora mine produces iron ore with a content of about 40 pct Fe, primarily in the form of magnetite. Operated by the Marmoraton Mining Co.,
Jan 9, 1960
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Classification of Roof Falls in Coal MinesBy N. B. Aughenbaugh, W. C. Patrick
The availability of a thorough, simple-to-use roof fall classification system is desirable for several reasons. First, such a system would expedite the reporting of falls for the purposes of estimatin
Jan 3, 1979
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New York - Philadelphia Paper - Principles Controlling the Geologic Deposition of the Hydrocarbons (Discussion p. 1053)By George L. Adams
There is an extensive literature relative to gas, oil, and the more solid hydrocarbons; but when it has all been digested and summarized, the resulting information is far from being satisfactory. The
Jan 1, 1903
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Advantages of High Production Level in Underground MiningBy D. S. Nilsson
Small-scale mines are today expected to provide much of the increased production of metals and coal this county demands. But in fact the category of larger mines tends to grow in number and size faste
Jan 1, 1983
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International Mineral Trade Series Part III and IVBy John D. Ridge, Betty S. Moriwaki
The significant chromite producers listed in Table I11 are not major steel producers, with the exception of the USSR. After manganese, chromium is the most important alloying metal in steel. It would
Jun 1, 1955
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Washington Paper - Determination of Phosphorus in Iron and SteelBy Andrew A. Blair
The increased importance and value of chemical analysis in connection with metallurgical operations is largely, if not entirely, due to the increased accuracy of the analytical methods used for the qu
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Industrial Minerals - Phosphate Mining by the Simplot Fertilizer Company near Fort Hall, IdahoBy Heath B. Fowler
The surface mining operations of the Simplot Fertilizer Co. are on the Fort Hall Indian Reservation approximately 16 miles east of Fort Hall, Idaho (Fig 1). The Phosphoria formation outcrops i
Jan 1, 1950
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Crushing And Grinding Practice In SwedenBy B. Fagerberg, P. H. Fahlstrom
Crushing and grinding practice in Sweden follows closely the international pattern. Certain special circumstances, however, have had an influence on its development. Most mines are worked underground.
Jan 10, 1969