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Recent Developments In The Prevention And Control Of Spontaneous Combustion In Coal Mining OperationBy R. N. Chakravorty
Spontaneous combustion presents a very serious hazard to both safety and economics of mining operations. Notwithstanding considerable research that has been done over the years to present and control
Jan 1, 1988
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Valuation Of Industrial Mineral Producing OperationsBy J. G. Russell
The valuation of known mineral re-serves entails the economic evaluation of the mining enterprise and the valuation of other assets employed, including mining and processing plant and intangible asset
Jan 1, 1989
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Design Criteria For Resin BoltingBy S. S. Peng
A hybrid boundary element-finite element model was formulated to model roof bolt reinforcement of the roof strata with bedding planes. This model was used to analyze the stress distribution around a r
Jan 1, 1989
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Assessing the feasibility of a commercially available wireless Internet of Things system to improve conveyor safetyBy K. V. Raj, R. Jacksha
Conveyor systems persist in being a source of injuries and fatalities in the mining industry. To reduce these incidents, better methods are needed to enhance the monitoring of probable hazards and imp
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Flotation Of Coarse Phosphate In Counter Current ColumnBy H. S. Soto
The exact reasons that explain the low recoveries of coarse particles in conventional flotation machines are not clear. Being a concern for only a couple of mineral industries comparatively very few s
Jan 1, 1989
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New Developments In Material Balance Calculations For The Mineral Processing IndustryBy D. Hodouin
The improvement of mineral processing data using material balance computer programs is nowadays a current practice in many plants, engineering companies or research centers. It now becomes more obviou
Jan 1, 1989
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Acid. Acid Rain And U.S. Copper Competitiveness The Mexican-American Smelter AgreementBy M. Rieber
In July 1985, as the U.S. copper industry contracted and the Mexican industry expanded, a trans border pollution agreement was signed which included smelter air pollution control in the "Gray Triangle
Jan 1, 1988
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Repeat Violation Reduction ProgramBy R. L. Keaton
Since the earliest days of mining, the job of digging coal out of the earth has been considered one of the world?s most dangerous occupations. From 1880 to 1910, mine explosions and other accidents cl
Jan 1, 1988
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Predicting the mine of the future: SME keynote looks toward the next generationBy William Gleason
"What will the mine of the future look like? Will it resemble the current operations that supply the world with the products it needs to function, or will it be something totally different? How will t
Jan 1, 2014
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Mine Emergency PreparednessBy W. Moser
During the ten year span from 1978 to 1987, the number of fires which occurred in under-ground coal mines doubled from the previous ten years. Anyone involved with underground coal mines is well aware
Jan 1, 1993
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UCA?s North American Tunneling Conference Set For Los AngelesBy Steve Kral
The Underground Construction Association?s (UCA) 2014 North American Tunneling (NAT) conference is expected to attract about 1,000 tunneling and underground construction professionals. With the theme
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2014 Arizona conference draws more than 500 attendeesBy William Gleason
"During the past nine years the number of cellular phones connected to a network has increased from 34 percent of the world’s population in 2005 to 93 percent in 2014. These phones are powered by a co
Jan 1, 2014
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The best personal protective equipment is your brain:And a new generation of safety culture experts are telling mining companies how to use it: It is a situation that is still too common in the mining industry: the latest personal protective gear is in
Jun 1, 2010
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Hydrologic Considerations In Mine-Site EvaluationBy Lawrence R. Molsather
Certain hydrologic parameters are affected by development of a mine. These include the area, yield, and storage in a watershed. Alteration of these parameters results in variations in lake levels and
Jan 1, 1980
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Flat Glass Raw Materials: A Twenty Year PerspectiveBy B. E. Penrod
The main constituents of flat glass are the eight commonest elements of the earth's crust. Five of these, silicon, sodium, calcium, magnesium and oxygen are essential. Two more, Aluminum and pota
Jan 1, 1994
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Improving Contracting Methods - The Engineer's ViewpointBy Thomas R. Kuesel
In simpler times, construction was a cooperative undertaking. The frontier tradition of barn-raising is the construction equivalent of the academic ideal of a single student seated on a log with Horac
Jan 1, 1983
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Process Guarantees In The Mining IndustryBy J. W. Gulyas
Settling a contract for process design involves a negotiation between the design engineers and the client. Clients wish to offload as much risk as possible by seeking various guarantees about the pro
Jan 1, 2010
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Sharing 2D And 3D Data Between GIS And Mine Planning SoftwareBy D. Elroi
This paper addresses the sharing of 2D and 3D data between GIS and mine planning software. Two-dimensional (2D) data, and now three-dimensional (3D) data as well, can be formatted such that both types
Jan 1, 1998
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Newly Adopted Structure Criteria for BART Underground Facilities—Industry Update - NAT2022By Samer Sadek, Phoebe Cheng, Changmo Kwon, Myat Ohn
BART Facilities Standards (BFS) Structural Criteria is a living document that governs planning, design, and construction of all BART projects. Since its development, the document undergoes incremental
Dec 1, 2022
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4. Discovery History of Duval's Copper Deposits at Battle Mountain, NevadaBy John E. Frost
Duval's (now Battle Mountain Gold Co.) copper and gold deposits in the Battle Mountain District in Nevada are in two subdistricts - Copper Basin and Copper Canyon - about 18 km (11miles) apart. L
Jan 1, 1991