Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Is a 2.5áper cent Success Rate Good Enough? Traditional Mine Development Methods have the Tail Wagging the DogBy J Jackson, D C. Curry, A C. Keith
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) data shows that since 2006 the balance of capital costs associated with mine development has become weighted greater than 75 per cent to enabling infrastructure a
Sep 29, 2013
-
Is a Change in Solid Solubility a Liability or an Asset?By E. M. Wise
WHEN man became dissatisfied with the mere utilization of physical force and began to use weapons, he made a definite stride forward. At first he used sticks, animal bones and stones, often rudely sha
Jan 1, 1931
-
Is a Koepe Hoist Always a Better SolutionBy R. P. Townsend
It is a widely accepted "fact" that a Koepe friction hoist is generally the best solution for production hoisting when compared to a double drum hoists. This would appear to be true if one looks at th
Jan 1, 2011
-
Is a road to sustainable use of non-renewable mineral raw materials possible?By V. Steinbach
Non-renewable mineral raw materials are grouped into three categories to investigate ways leading to sustainable use of natural resources: 1.) metallic resources, 2.) non-metallic resources with the e
Jan 1, 2011
-
Is an 80th Percentile Design Point Logical?By D David
Clearly a plant designed only to treat average ore at the nameplate rate will fail to achieve nameplate in any typical year. To insert the necessary capability to achieve nameplate it is common proces
Jul 15, 2013
-
Is an Autonomous Haulage System Better than a Manual System?By J. Parreira
This paper presents a deterministic/stochastic model that was created to compare an autonomous haulage truck system to a manual one by calculating and estimating benchmarked Key Performance Indicators
Aug 1, 2013
-
Is Australia Producing Sufficient Numbers of Earth Science Graduates?By Robinson KJ
There has been much debate in recent years regarding the number of Geology (Earth Science) graduates produced in Australia. The key variable has commonly been assumed to be the placement of graduat
Jan 1, 1989
-
Is Bigger Better? Building Market Resilience into Process Plant DesignBy P L. McCarthy
In an environment of accelerating capital costs, limited capital availability and strongly cyclic metal prices, there is a difference between a robust mining and processing operation and one that woul
Jul 15, 2013
-
Is Bigger Better? Colorado MPD Examines Age-Old QuestionNever known as a conference to shy away from its share of off-color jokes, the Colorado Mineral Processing Division?s Annual Meeting returned to the Broadmoor Hotel in Colorado Springs, CO April 26-28
Jan 1, 2012
-
Is Bigger Still Better? Considerations in Increasing the Size Of Haulage EquipmentBy M. Dotto, T. G. Joseph, M. Curley
"Equipment selection is a key decision in mine planning. Equipment size affects decisions from pit size to the total operation cost. Particularly when replacing haulage fleets for long-life surface mi
Jan 1, 2019
-
Is Complete Sulphur Oxidation Desirable? The Benefits of Partial Bacterial Oxidation Using Bactech's Moderate Thermophile CultureBy Peter A. Spencer
Bacterial oxidation technology has the ability to selectively attack sulphide minerals. Selectivity allows oxidation of more reactive minerals and the extraction of valuable metals while leaving the b
Jan 1, 1992
-
Is Conservation a Natural Resource?By Margaret N. Maxey
Man's capacity far fretting is endless, and no matter what difficulties we surmount, how many ideals we realize, there is a stealthy pleasure in rejecting mankind or the universe as unworthy of o
Jan 1, 1986
-
Is Control of Fine Coal Circuits Necessary?By Randhir Sehgal
If the primary purpose of a control system is to assure a fixed-quality product at maximum yield, the real issue involved in control of the fine coal cleaning circuit in a plant is to demonstrate that
Jan 1, 1988
-
Is Design Build for Chicago Area Tunnel in the Cards?–Cady Marsh Drainage Ditch and Tunnel/Pipeline Project, Griffith, IndianaBy Faruk Oksuz, Clay Haynes, David Egger
The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) has committed to solve a major drainage problem in the suburban Chicago community of Griffith, Indiana. The Cady Marsh Ditch is currently undersized a
Jan 1, 2003
-
Is Every Mine a Pilot?By G I. Lumley
‘Every mine is a pilot’ is an attitude which encourages the mining paradox of optimistic mine plans and equipment under performance; propped up by an environment lacking accountability. The premise th
Jun 22, 2016
-
Is Excess Pore Water Pressure Build Up An Engineering Demand Parameter For Excavation Analyses?By A. Felipe Uribe-Henao, Camilo Ballesteros, Luis G. Arboleda-Monsalve, David G. Zapata-Medina
Conventional excavation analysis based on total or effective stress methods can result in inaccurate estimation of ground movements when impervious soil conditions or rapid excavation sequences are no
-
Is Extractive Metallurgy a Branch of Chemical Engineering?Courses in chemical engineering and metallurgical engineering at the University of Queensland were compared and the main difference was found to be the greater emphasis on the application of chemi
Jan 1, 1984
-
Is Extractive Metallurgy Becoming Extinct?By Ian M. Ritchie
Right across the universities of the developed world, the traditional disciplines of physics and chemistry are losing ground. Extractive metallurgy, which depends so heavily on chemistry, is also con
Jan 1, 2003
-
Is Gravitational Force Considered Properly in an Elasto-Plastic Numerical Analysis of Underground Structures?By S. Sakurai
"Gravitational force is an external body force acting on underground structures. It should be noted that gravitational force cannot be replaced with the surface traction vector (Cauchy stress) which i
Jan 1, 2015
-
Is International Experience of Risk-Based Decision Making for Road Tunnel Safety Applicable in the Unique US-American Regulatory Environment? - NAT2024By Arnold Dix, Oliver Heger, Bernhard Kohl
In the USA, risk-based decision making has not been a common approach to tunnel safety in the past, but this is changing, as concepts such as “equivalency” in the NFPA 502 framework gain acceptance in
Jun 23, 2024