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Books > Professional & Technical > Other technologies > Mining technology & engineering
The most comprehensive upstream petroleum dictionary ever
published. More than 20,000 definitions of words, phrases and
abbreviations used in exploration, drilling and production with
more than 500 illustrations. Definitions are written for use by
both nontechnical and technical readers. Extensive appendices that
include charts of drilling rigs and a beam pumper, giant oil and
gas fields, United States and Canada geological features, sandstone
and limestone classifications, drillstem test symbols, drilling and
completion records, and many more."
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A Practical Hand-book For Miners, Metallurgists, And Assayers
- Comprising The Most Recent Improvements In The Disintegration, Amalgamation, Smelting, And Parting Of The Precious Ores Containing Gold, Silver, Copper, Tin, Quicksilver, Etc., Etc., With
(Paperback)
Julius Silversmith
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R689
Discovery Miles 6 890
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This framework document provides a practical approach for designing
representative studies and developing uniform sampling guidelines
to support estimates of health outcomes that are explicitly linked
to exposure to land-based contaminants from ASGM activities.
Hydraulic mining was, and remains, controversial. It produced great
wealth from the soil of California, yet damaged the land in such a
way that the scars will remain for eons. Great hillsides were
denuded of soil by streams of water which boggle the imagination,
and the sediment which was washed away filled the streambeds of the
valleys below, causing flooding which decimated agriculture and
inundated towns. This important new work, the first book-length
study of the subject, provides a complete history of hydraulic
mining, its background and eventual demise. Mining techniques prior
to the hydraulic period are described, as are the inventions which
followed. The only true invention of a completely new method of
mining to be introduced in the California gold fields was hydraulic
mining. Today it seems almost incredible that it took so long for
someone to finally get the rather simple idea of using a hose and
nozzle under pressure to wash down a bank of gravel. The author
gives detailed treatment to the inventions and technology developed
for hydraulic mining. The story of the particular mines, of the
litigation concerning them, labor problems in them, and individuals
who played major roles in their operation are all discussed. The
story of the richest gravel deposits in California, located in the
area drained by three major river systems-the American, Yuba, and
Feather and also a smaller, but strategically located stream known
as the Bear River, are closely chronicled. The region in Nevada
County known as the San Juan Ridge, considered by Waldemar Lindgren
as the richest Tertiary gravel deposit in all of California,
receives special attention. A magnificent water system was
constructed in the Sierra which thrust the mining industry into the
forefront of engineering and technological advances-but the way
would be plagued by trial and error, disappointment and
considerable failure. Neither a condemnation nor an apologia of
hydraulic mining in California, this book attempts an unbiased look
at this most controversial of subjects. Although most of the
research materials available for this study, such as government
mining publications, were written by persons mostly sympathetic to
the industry, sufficient objectivity and balance have been
maintained to help the reader come to a fair judgment regarding
hydraulic mining. The author's notes and selected bibliography
testify to the scope of the research materials utilized in this
study. Illustrations and maps portray the mining areas and the
tools and techniques used in hydraulic mining. The final court
battles between the "anti-debris" forces and the miners is detailed
and analyzed, as the demise of hydraulic mining was accomplished by
its foes.
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