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Technical Papers - Mining Practice - Drilling and Blasting Practices Past and Present at Bingham Canyon Utah Mine, Utah Copper Division of Kennecott Copper Corporation (Mining Tech., Nov. 1947, TP 2271)By Richard H. Willey
Efficient handling of large tonnages in open-pit mining demands, primarily, an abundance of well fragmented rock. To accomplish this, a drilling and blasting department composed of a well-knit, versat
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - Descriptive - Colloidal Deposition of Cinnabar (Mining Tech., July 1944, T.P. 1735)By James Pollock
The possibility of colloidal deposition of cinnabar has been neglected. In opalite deposits cinnabar exists in particles within or near the colloidal size range. Colloidal processes have been admitted
Jan 1, 1949
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Mining - Planning Deep Mining at HomestakeBy A. H. Shoemaker
THE shutdown of Homestake by Government order L-208, with its consequent disruption of a very stable and trained working force, coupled with postwar inflation and the coincidence that a mining depth h
Jan 1, 1959
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Shaft-Sinking Practices and CostsBy J. Fred, Johnson
THIS TALK is a digest of some of the information contained in tables, one on practices and one on costs of shaft sinking, in Bulletin 357 of the U. S. Bureau of Mines written by E. D. Gardner, Supervi
Jan 1, 1933
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Cementation of Nickel onto IronBy F. Lawson, N. A. Sareyed-Dim
A rotating disk of iron precipitant in a high temperature batch reactor has been used to study the kinetics of precipitation of nickel from low concentration aqueous solutions. Under inert atmosphere
Jan 1, 1977
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Mining - More Rock Per Dollar from the MacIntyre PitBy F. R. Jones
AT Tahawus, N. Y., National Lead Co. operates the MacIntyre development. Here the world's largest titanium mine produces 5200 long tons of ore per day and pours 8000 long tons of waste rock over
Jan 1, 1957
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Milling and Concentration (eabdd2a3-35c2-4b91-91a2-45b387bb19a0)Economic Significance of High-grade Concentrates BY PAUL M TYLER AND CARLE R HAYWARD (Min & Met, Dec, 563 4000 words) Generally pyro¬mctallurgical methods yield a higher recovery but cost more per ton
Jan 1, 1937
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Recovery Of Selenium From Electrolytic Copper Refinery Slimes - SummaryBy James E. Hoffmann
This paper reviews the chemistry of selenium and its compounds as it applies to the recovery of selenium from electrolytic copper refinery slimes. Based on this chemistry various processes for the ext
Jan 1, 1984
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Trombetas and Other Amazon Basin BauxitesBy E. W. Greig
This paper is an account of exploration for bauxite in the Amazon Basin, Brazil, and particularly of the discovery, exploration and development of the Trombetas deposits by Alcan. A general report of
Jan 1, 1979
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PART VI - Communications - The Solubility of Indium in Liquid SodiumBy H. A. Davies
DURING a current program of research on the structure and properties of liquid sodium alloys, the need arose for information on the solubilities as a function of temperature of several B subgroup meta
Jan 1, 1968
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Uranium (7bee0d04-9093-4d0d-a6dd-4079309252a5)By Cyril Stanley Smith
METALLURGISTS - or at least metals - have been of central importance in most of the inventions that have shaped the course of man's history. From the first Bronze Age tools to the iron armor of t
Jan 1, 1953
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Geology - Geology of Toquepala, Peru - DiscussionBy James H. Courtright, Kenyon Richard
L. H. Hart (Chief Geologist, American Smelting & Refining Co.)— Because of a widely recognized association between breccia pipes of one form or another and many important copper deposits, conditions u
Jan 1, 1959
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Development of Tractor and Airplane Transportation in ManitobaBy George Cole
WHILE many parts of Canada's pre-Cambrian shield are well served by railway, it is frequently necessary for prospecting purposes to proceed farther into areas in-accessible by rail. To such areas
Jan 1, 1940
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Iron and Steel Division - Application of the ARL Quantometer to Production Control in a Steel MillBy H. C. Brown
SINCE 1934 the steel industry has been utilizing the spectrograph for supplementing wet chemical analysis in the production control of electric and open hearth furnaces. This means of control made gre
Jan 1, 1955
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The Economic Production of Uranium by In-Situ LeachingBy Kim C. Harden
INTRODUCTION The purpose of the following discussion is to present the state of the art of solution mining. Since the economics of a mining method ultimately determines its applicability and viabi
Jan 1, 1980
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Industrial Minerals - Production of Graded Glass Sand by Grinding and ClassificationBy M. M. Fine
THE problem of producing a uniform, medium-fine sand for glass-furnace feed has been of interest to the glass-container industry for many years. In the present investigation of the problem, conducted
Jan 1, 1951
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Industrial Minerals - Production of Graded Glass Sand by Grinding and ClassificationBy M. M. Fine
THE problem of producing a uniform, medium-fine sand for glass-furnace feed has been of interest to the glass-container industry for many years. In the present investigation of the problem, conducted
Jan 1, 1951
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The Newnam HearthBy William Newnam
THE smelting of galena in the ore hearth has been practiced in many countries for several hundred years with varying success. In the United States the water-jacketed American hearths and the Jumbo hea
Jan 10, 1915
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Vanishing Interest of the Student Engineer in Coal MiningBy Newell Alford
AT its meeting in the fall of 1937, the Executive Committee of the Coal Division considered the growing scarcity of young engineers entering coal mining with serious intentions. This scarcity was the
Jan 1, 1938
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Mining Industry Continues With Lower Fatal-Injury RatesBy S. H. Ash
THE increasing need for the products of our mines, mills, and processing plants, the loss of mine manpower to plants other than those concerned with the mineral industry, and the drafting of our young
Jan 1, 1952