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  • CIM
    The Administration of Mineral Rights

    By Lucas G. Thompson

    My topic, "The Administration of Mineral Rights'.' is possibly an unusual one, as it deals with a subject upon which many of us have a more than passing interest, I thought ?it might prove c

    Jan 1, 1923

  • CIM
    Corrosion in the mining industry

    By V. S. Sastri, G. R. Doey, R. W. Revie

    "Different forms of corrosion, the various corrosive environments encountered, the mining equipment subject to corrosion and the methods to control corrosion in the mining industry are briefly reviewe

    Jan 1, 1994

  • CIM
    A Method of Working a Highly Inclined Thick Coal-Seam

    By J. A. H. Church

    My paper entitled "Spontaneous Combustion of Coal in Mines;" read some time ago before this Branch, consisted chiefly of extracts from the British Blue Book dealing with the same subject. Fallowing my

    Jan 1, 1924

  • CIM
    Some Economic Aspects of the Gold Mining Industry

    By J. Edwin Van Buskirk

    For a country that is as important a gold producer as Canada, the return to the gold standard of the major commercial countries of the world during the past five years is of particular significance. T

    Jan 1, 1928

  • CIM
    Oil and Gas in Ontario

    By R. B. Harkness

    Many of us are familiar with the history of oil in the Province of Ontario, but for the benefit of those who have never heard the story I will repeat it. In 185 7 J. H. Williams, of Hamilton, an old-c

    Jan 1, 1924

  • CIM
    Geophysics in Exploration at Falconbridge

    By F. McIntosh Galbraith

    EMPLOYING geophysics to find ore was for a long time considered by the Canadian mining fraternity to be a performance of dubious value: in a category somewhere between the practice of sorcery, and usi

    Jan 1, 1939

  • CIM
    Co-operation

    By G. M. Humphrey

    It is a great honour and privilege to be here in this distinguished company of the outstanding men in the mining industry and the political life of Canada. I fully recognize that I am so honoured as a

    Jan 1, 1951

  • CIM
    Dust in British Columbia Mines

    By D. A. MacLeod

    DURING the past fourteen months, dust surveys have been made at thirty-six mines in the Province. These surveys are made to determine the concentration of dust in the mine atmosphere, the flow of air

    Jan 1, 1939

  • CIM
    Mines and Mining in Spain

    By E. S. Moore

    To properly understand industrial conditions in Spain it is necessary to consider the early history of the country. Spain is very backward in many lines. They use the sickle for cutting grain, and plo

    Jan 1, 1927

  • CIM
    Gold in the Canadian Cordillera

    By D. A. Barr

    "Most of the lode and placer gold production in the Canadian Cordillera has been derived from mines and placers in the Intermontane and Omineca belts. Gold has been produced from rocks of Precambrian

    Jan 1, 1980

  • CIM
    Some Developments in Aluminum Reduction

    By T. G. Edgeworth

    Some of the historical background of the industry is reviewed, with reference to the different types of reduction cells in use for aluminum smelting. Factors to be considered in cell des1gn involve ca

    Jan 1, 1962

  • CIM
    Cross-border shopping in mining?

    By Robert B. Parsons

    "It is generally acknowledged that Canadian and foreign-based mining companies are spending relatively fewer dollars in Canada and more dollars abroad than was the case not many years ago. It is commo

    Jan 1, 1992

  • CIM
    Manning Best Practice in Australia

    By Stephen Williams

    This paper examines manning best practice in the Australian mining industry. In particular, the paper considers a range of mining operations and their manning levels as measured by operational benchma

    May 1, 2009

  • CIM
    Borehole geophysics in environmental applications

    By C. J. Mwenifumbo

    Preservation of groundwater quality is a major environmental concern. The disposal of hazardous material from urban waste dumps, milling wastes in tailings ponds, and industrial wastes in injection we

    Jan 1, 1993

  • CIM
    Cordilleran Region Red Rose Tungsten Mine

    By A. Sutherland Brown

    "The Red Rose Mine is in the Rocher Deboule Range, 8 miles south of Hazelton. The mill camp (elevation 4,000 feet) is on Red Rose Creek, 11 miles by road from Skeena Crossing. The mine camp is one mil

    Jan 1, 1949

  • CIM
    Abrasion and Wear in Mills

    By D. Houghton

    "I am very pleased to be a member on this panel today because abrasion and wear in mills has been part of my life over the past forty years. My presentation will deal with the role Ni-Hard has played

    Jan 1, 1983

  • CIM
    Iron Management in Electrowinning Processes

    By Q. Ricoux, F. Goettmann, A. Maihatchi

    "Electrodeposition processes are widely used in the metallurgical industry to produce, extract and refine metals from various feed materials. However, raw materials used to provide non-ferrous metals

    Jan 1, 2016

  • CIM
    The Fissure Systems of British Columbia

    By Stuart J. Schofield

    Introduction The study of the ore deposits of British Columbia is one of fascinating interest not only from a scientific but also from a commercial standpoint and certain wide problems in connectio

    Jan 1, 1925

  • CIM
    Lightweight Aggregates in British Columbia

    By J. W. McCammon

    CRANGES in construction ideas and the continually rising costs of labour and conventional building materials, particularly since World War II, have prompted widespread investigations into the developm

    Jan 1, 1957

  • CIM
    Longwall Mining in Thin Seams

    By N. T. Avard

    THE Joggins coal field, Cumberland county, Nova Scotia, is on the easterly side of Chignecto bay, at the head of the bay of Fundy. In area, so far as proven, the field extends easterly from the town o

    Jan 1, 1944