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  • AUSIMM
    What is Relative about Energy?

    By A Scott, A C. Torrance

    Explosive properties are typically summarised on manufacturers’ technical data sheets. The values most commonly referred to are the density of the explosive, the energy it is expected to release and i

    Aug 24, 2015

  • AUSIMM
    What is Required for a Low-Cost Project Outcome?

    By M Dickie

    During the 1980s and early 1990s low cost gold treatment plants were at the forefront of the Australian engineering and mineral processing business. This opportunity was the result of a high gold pric

    Jan 1, 2009

  • AUSIMM
    What is the Future for Magnetite Projects in Australia and Why Have Some of the New Projects Been So Problematic?

    By D Connelly

    Magnetite orebodies generally means mining lower grade iron ores, crushing and grinding with significant energy costs in processing and the capital costs being significantly higher than for direct shi

    Jul 13, 2015

  • AUSIMM
    What is the Matter with Australian Mining?

    THERE are certain facts that the mining industry in Australia is faced with at the present moment which may be accepted as axioms. The industry is at a low ebb, as evidenced by statistics. Metals form

    Jan 1, 1919

  • AUSIMM
    What is the Oxygen Depletion Potential of ?Water Vapour?

    By M A. Tuck

    Atmospheric air on a moisture free volume basis consists of approximately 21 per cent oxygen. The current minimum threshold for oxygen in Australia is 19.5 per cent. Atmospheric air generally will als

    Aug 31, 2015

  • AUSIMM
    What Kyoto Protocol Means to the New Zealand Coal Industry

    New Zealand's obligations under Kyoto protocol New Zealand's economic and emissions profile Use of energy and electricity generation in New Zealand World energy supply Coal's rule in th

    Jan 1, 2002

  • AUSIMM
    What Makes a Corporation Sustainable? The Significance of Integrating Environment, Economic and Social Aspects with Governance and Accountability

    I want to explore whether it is valid or even useful to talk about sustainable corporations. After 20 years of focus on sustainable development, the concept of a sustainable corporation is not particu

    Jan 1, 2002

  • AUSIMM
    What Project Managers must Demand from an Economic Evaluation!

    By P Card

    Some project managers accept unsatisfactory economic evaluation modelling because they are unaware of what constitutes good practice. They tend to leave it to the evaluation specialist or others to de

    May 24, 2012

  • AUSIMM
    What the Internet of Things Means to Mining

    By D Kent, D Eisner

    A lot of talk has been generated about the so called ‘Internet of Things’ (IoT) and its potential to transform the way we interact with our homes and devices. But the true potential and value of IoT i

    Nov 4, 2015

  • AUSIMM
    What Women in Mining Want

    With the next mining boom looming, the industry will once again struggle to meet skills needed as the current generation boomers are set to retire. In order to meet these needs it is going to need to

    Jun 1, 2010

  • AUSIMM
    What Would Sustainability in the Mining Industry Look Like and How Do We Get There?

    æSustainabilityÆ is one of those words that has gained more usage in popular discourse than in the dictionary. In fact it is not in many dictionaries at all. Typically, given this, it also seems to me

    Jan 1, 2002

  • AUSIMM
    What Your Maintenance Manager Would Like You to Know

    This paper is for mine managers. It is about maintenance of mining equipment. This is an extremely broad subject so this paper is given with the caveat that it necessarily contains generalisations, no

    Jan 1, 2006

  • AUSIMM
    WhatÆs Driving Natural Revegetation Patterns on Overburden at Wangaloa Coal Mine?

    By D Craw, S Clearwater, S Hammit, C Smith

    Prior to rehabilitation, plant cover on quartz gravel overburden at Wangaloa coal mine was highly patchy. Stabilisation techniques have since considerably altered the condition of the main overburden

    Jan 1, 2004

  • AUSIMM
    What’s Stopping You? The Role of Sheeting Material Selection in Safe Haulage Operations

    By R Thompson, D Tulloch

    "Wet-weather or 24×7 wet-trafficability is a commendable design objective for unpaved mine haul roads, but practically often difficult to achieve, due both to the road sheeting material selected, and

    Nov 15, 2016

  • AUSIMM
    Wheal Gawler

    Wheal Gawler was Australia's first metal mine. This leader was followed by an army of other metalliferous underground mines and surface operations in Australia. As a mine it was not highly si

    Jan 1, 1987

  • AUSIMM
    When Best Water Use Efficiency is Not Enough, What Can the Mining Industry Do?

    Water is required as a key strategic resource in most mining and metallurgical processes and, in some countries, it has become a limiting supply for the development of mining activity. During the last

    Jan 1, 2009

  • AUSIMM
    When Does Further Processing at the Mine Site Make Sense?

    By G Lane, S La Brooy

    A century ago, new mines were often accompanied by smelters. In Australia, smelters were built at the Daydream mine near Broken Hill, at Kuridala and Mount Elliott near Mount Isa, Broken Hill, Mount L

    Jan 1, 2008

  • AUSIMM
    When Not Only the Ground is Hot!

    By T Ross, S Cameron

    The requirement to use explosives in ground temperatures exceeding 50¦C is becoming more common as mines work to maximise the recovery of their resources. Orica Explosives was requested to assist in t

    Jan 1, 2001

  • AUSIMM
    When Nothing is What You Need – The Importance of Using Blanks at All Stages of Sample Preparation

    By J Webb

    "It is vitally important in projects where the cut-off grade is low that there is no contamination during the sampling and sample preparation process, both in the ore and the waste zones. Failure to i

    Jul 29, 2014

  • AUSIMM
    When Organisations Fail: New Thinking on Disasters

    Disasters are often tragic outcomes of high-risk technologies such as mines. In Australia, more mines are being developed every day, and the risk of disasters is ever increasing. No matter how effecti

    Jan 1, 1999