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Auxiliary Ventilation in Underground MinesBy L. K. Marshall
Last month's engineering fundamentals article discussed some general considerations of underground mine ventilation. This month's article takes a look at auxiliary ventilation-brattice, fans
Jan 2, 1982
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Face Stabilisation in Closed Shield TunnellingBy K. Kovári, G. Anagnostou
Slurry and EPB-shield tunnelling have been successfully applied worldwide in recent years. Under extremely unfavourable geological conditions, however, face instabilities may occur. The present paper
Jan 1, 1997
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Dispute Review Boards -- Current Status And RecommendationsBy Robert M. Matyas, P. E. Sperry, Robert J. Smith, A. A. Mathews
INTRODUCTION The first Dispute Review Board (DRB) was utilized on a tunnel project 20 years ago. Increasingly utilized on a wide range of construction projects, DRB's are becoming the norm on
Jan 1, 1995
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Improving Real-Time Expert Control Systems Through Deep Data Mining Of Plant Data And Global Plant-Wide Energy Monitoring And AnalysisBy L. B. Hales
Expert control of grinding and flotation plants has been successfully used in the minerals industry since the 1970?s. The earliest of these systems were written in a hard-coded fashion in FORTRAN, BA
Jan 1, 2012
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Social sustainable development in Vietnamese coal mining industry - challenges in occupational safety and healthBy J. Kretschmann, N. Nguyen
"The Vietnamese economic growth of more than 5% per year leads this country to an enormous demand for raw materials. In the duration of ongoing expansion, the big challenge in the coming decades will
Jan 1, 2011
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ISO 9000 Gains Ground in the Industrial Minerals IndustryBy Tim O’Neil
ISO 9000 is a system of quality standards that originated in Europe in the 1980s and has since been widely adopted by manufacturing companies throughout the world. The ISO 9000 standards have received
Jan 1, 1995
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Design And Construction Of The Lafayette Bluff TunnelBy D. L. Petersen, C. R. Nelson, B. K. Nelson, B. D. Wagener
The Lafayette Bluff tunnel, currently under construction for the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT), will be among the widest highway tunnels in the United States. The 199-meter tunnel is
Jan 1, 1991
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Muruntau: The World’s Largest Gold Producing Mine ComplexBy Jan Krason
Introduction The South African Witwatersrand is the world's largest gold-bearing province and gold producing district. But the production capacity of the very big mines (Vaal Reef, Driefontein C
Jan 11, 1984
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Economics Of Autogenous GrindingBy S. Lähteenmäki, P. Koivistoinen, J. Levanaho
Semi Autogenous Grinding (SAG) circuit is the most common grinding circuit to day. In Europe and South Africa fully autogenous (AG) circuits are also popular. SAG circuit has a lower capital cost and
Jan 1, 2001
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Industrial Minerals 2004 - TitaniumThe market for titanium feedstocks (ilmenite, rutile,synthetic rutile and slag) is driven primarily by offtake from the titanium dioxide (TiO2) pigment industry. The pigment sector depends on the per
Jan 1, 2005
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Wireless Access To Live Data From Mining Operations - Anywhere & AnytimeBy R. Heersink, C. H. Wells
Innovations in communications and real-time information systems are providing industry opportunities to improve profitability. Real-time operating data is collected from equipment across a site or ev
Jan 1, 2002
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Recreating a Headwater Stream System on a Head-of-Hollow FillBy C. T. Agouridis
Head-of-hollow fills or valley fills have gained national attention due to increasing environmental concerns, particularly with regards to headwater stream loss. Researchers at the University of Kent
Jan 1, 2008
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Steel Fiber Reinforced Tunnel LiningsBy Peter Shuttleworth, Chris Fesq, Eddie Woods
Precast concrete segmental linings for tunnels have traditionally been designed with conventional steel bar reinforcement. In many cases, this has been satisfactory in service, but in others, major pr
Jan 1, 2005
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Three-Dimensional Modeling of Fugitive Dust Dispersion in Idealized Openpit MinesBy K. V. Raj, T. Bhowmick
"The control of fugitive dust in high-latitude openpit mines is challenging due to unique atmospheric phenomena resulting in complicated flow regimes as well as atmospheric inversion due to the lack o
Jan 1, 2015
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Ventilation and atmosphere control inside a 3-bar compressed air TBM headingBy B. R. Zernich
Advances in tunneling technology, such as Earth Pressure Balance and Slurry Shield methods, have allowed the tunneling industry to construct tunnels in increasingly difficult ground conditions. In rec
Jan 1, 2009
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How Smoke Hinders Escape From Coal Mine FiresBy F. N. Kissell, C. D. Litton
This study predicts the level of smoke that miners might meet while trying to escape a coal mine fire and describes how smoke would impede their safe escape. For this study, the authors assumed that m
Jan 1, 1993
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Diesel Particulate Matter –So What’s The Big Deal?By E. A. Metz
Perfect combustion in an engine would produce only water vapor, carbon dioxide and nitrogen as by-products; however, complete combustion is never achieved. As a mobile power plant, the diesel engi
Jan 1, 2001
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Uranium Mining In Arizona Breccia Pipes –High Grade And SafeBy K. Wenrich
The uranium industry has made a dramatic turnaround in the past three years that even the most optimistic economist was not willing to predict during the uranium downswing of the 1990s. Uranium reach
Jan 1, 2007
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In-Mine Study Of High-Expansion Firefighting Foam - Preprint 09-095By L. L. Chasko
A mine fire is one of the most challenging safety issues facing a mine operator and can occur at any location underground. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the Tw
Jan 1, 2009
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New look at underground coal mine safetyBy E. M. Spokes
Starting in 1980, a committee of the National Research Council studied the question of why some underground coal mines are safer than others and what could be done to improve the ones with poorer perf
Jan 1, 1987