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  • RMCMI
    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

  • SME
    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

  • SME
    Is Design Build for Chicago Area Tunnel in the Cards?–Cady Marsh Drainage Ditch and Tunnel/Pipeline Project, Griffith, Indiana

    By 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

  • AUSIMM
    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

  • DFI
    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

  • AUSIMM
    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

  • TMS
    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

  • CIM
    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

  • SME
    Is International Experience of Risk-Based Decision Making for Road Tunnel Safety Applicable in the Unique US-American Regulatory Environment? - NAT2024

    By 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

  • AUSIMM
    Is Ion-Exchange Technology for Gold Extraction Ready for Commercialisation?

    By J S. J van Deventer, D C. Shallcross

    New developments are taking place in the recovery of gold from leached pulps that are based upon the adsorption of the metal cyanide species onto ion exchange resins. Despite the success of several re

    Jan 1, 1998

  • AUSIMM
    Is It Bankable

    Aberfoyle sought to reduce Hellyer project development risk to a greater degree than usual. Consequently the ore reserves estimate and feasibility study were particularly comprehensive. A detailed o

    Jan 1, 1990

  • AIME
    Is It Feasible To Make Common Carriers Of Natural Gas Transmission Lines?

    By Samuel Wyer

    Over 8,000,000 people in the United States depend on natural gas for their cooking, heating and lighting service. This service has been made possible only by the investment of large amounts of capital

    Jan 5, 1914

  • ISEE
    Is it Realistic to Always Expect Optimal Performance from Explosives?

    By Tapan Goswami

    The expectation from the blasting engineers and shotfirers is often that explosives will perform optimally at all times. However, in reality, non-ideal situations exist on mine sites and occurrences o

    Jan 1, 2003

  • AUSIMM
    Is it so Hard? Getting the Balance Right

    Project approvals are the key mechanism to balance the environmental, social and economic aspects of a project. The assessment approaches vary significantly between states, with some having a strong e

    Jun 1, 2010

  • SME
    Is it time for a Global Mining Initiative 2.0?

    By Vighnesh Chandurkar, Peter Moser, Michael Hitch, Michael Tost, Susanne Feiel

    "From 1998-2002 the world's leading mining and metals companies developed the Global Mining Initiative (GMI) to understand their industry's role in the transition to sustainable development and to ens

    Jan 1, 2017

  • SAIMM
    Is it wavy or rough?

    By J. P. Harrison

    ABSTRACT: The significant effect of fracture surface morphology on the mechanical behaviour of rock masses is well known and has been studied by many people. For linear profiles taken from fracture su

    Jan 1, 2003

  • AUSIMM
    Is Measuring pH Enough?

    By J Kinal, I Mitchell

    Many flotation plants use pH to adjust the pulp chemistry of their system to achieve optimum separation. For example, in a sequential lead/zinc circuit the pH during sphalerite flotation is increased

    Jan 1, 2006

  • AUSIMM
    Is Metal Recycling Sustainable?

    By D Brennan, S Jahanshahi, F Jorgensen

    The recycling of metals can be very efficient with careful selection of the material being recycled. The volume and value of recycled ferrous scrap has lead to the development of steel mini-mills whic

    Jan 1, 2002

  • SME-ICGCM
    Is Mining Coal at a 900M Below Surface at the Xuandong Coal Mine in China Challenging or Just Interesting Rock Mechanics?

    By Wouter Hartman

    Xuandong Coal Mine is mining coal in one of the most challenging underground environments in the world. This work has found that it is not only challenging but it also has the composition for some int

    Jan 1, 2012

  • SME
    Is Mining Technology Advancing Faster Than Ventilation Practices?

    By Terence H. Fisher

    The use of more productive mining equipment, the tendency to longer development and the advent of new mining methods have introduced new challenges to the ventilation practitioner in Western Australia

    Jan 1, 1995