1,470 research outputs found
Distribution, analysis, and recovery of fine gold from alluvial deposits
The United States Bureau of Mines, in its Heavy Metals Program, desired to have research performed to determine the size-frequency distribution and possible
economic value of gold particles in the fine size ranges of Alaskan placer deposits.
Primary interest was involved in obtaining evidence of the occurrence of fine gold
and to determine the ameanability of standard sampling and production methods in the evaluation and recovery processes. A research contract between the United States Bureau of Mines and the University of Alaska was initiated in June, 1968 as the first phase of this investigation, but was subsequently modified in June, 1969 to include beneficiation processes amenable to recovery as well as evaluation methods for fine and flakey gold. In searching the literature relative to fine gold in Alaskan placer deposits, it was found that virtually no research has been devoted to determining the extent of fine gold distribution and its effect on evaluation and subsequent recovery methods. Standard evaluation techniques have relied on gravity methods of concentration and recovery of the visible gold from the concentrate. In general, this has proved
satisfactory in that operational recovery methods used were probably not conducive
to retaining gold particles of less than 100 mesh in size. Operators have made no attempt to obtain a size analysis of gold in a head sample, but many have kept records of the size distribution of the gold as actually recovered. A review of these records, from selected areas, indicates that the -100 mesh gold represents from 0 to 5% of the total gold recovered. Although figures of this type may point to a probably fine gold loss, the difficulties inherent in evaluating the tailng material or modifying the recovery system have usually discouraged efforts in this direction.This study was made possible by the Financial support of the United States Bureau of
Mines through Research Contract No. HOl81009 with the University of Alaska
Study of a static screen, jig, spiral, and a compound water cyclone in a placer gold recovery plant
During the 1986 mining season both laboratory and field test work were conducted to study the performance efficiencies of a wedge-wire static screen, a Pan-American jig, a Reichert Mark VII spiral, and a 12" compound water cyclone. This work was conducted at EVECO, Inc.'s placer gold operations near Fox, Alaska, and funded by the State of Alaska Department of Natural Resources. The Mineral Industry Research Laboratory of the University of Alaska-Fairbanks perfomed the test work.Funded by the State of Alaska Department of Natural Resources
Heavy minerals in Alaskan beach sand deposits
Beach sand deposits along Alaska's shoreline have been prospected and worked for their precious metal content since the time of Russian occupation. Areas such as the Nome Beaches of the Seward Peninsula have been very productive, and in recent years exploration has proceded to include off shore extensions of these deposits. Evaluation of associated heavy mineral contents of these deposits, however, have been cursory and in most cases neglected entirely. In view of the thousands of miles of Alaskan coastline with known mineral provinces on adjacent land; much information is needed concerning the origin of mineral constituents, evaluation of
past and present beach deposits and possibilities of off shore extensions of tho
continental shelf. This report is concerned with samples of beach sand material submitted to the Mineral Industry Research Laboratory by individuals. These samples, taken from
various locations, cannot be viewed as programs designed to delineate reserves from
the respective areas. They should be considered as reconnaissance samples to indicate the mineral constituents present and the need for more comprehensive evaluation.
Systematic and complete evaluation of all mineral constituents, including precious materials, is a major undertaking because of the erratic nature of the deposits. Special studies are required concerning sampling techniques, mining methods, recovery
systems and marketing procedures. It is, therefore, beyond the financial capabilities of most individuals and requires the involvement of government agencies or
corporations to obtain the necessary data to determine economic feasibility
Conference on Alaskan placer mining, focus: gold recovery systems
Alaska Miners' Association and the School of Mineral Industry, University of Alaska, Fairbanks conference proceedings of the Alaskan Placer Mining conference on Gold Recovery Systems
Placer mining in Alaska II
During July, August and September, 1979, a team from the Mineral Industry Research Laboratory visited a number of placer mining districts that could be reached by automobile, hence at a reasonable cost for transportation. These districts yielded varying amounts of information that will be of value to the industry. The district visited were: 1. Fairbanks, 2. Circle (Birch Creak), 3. Livengood (Tolovana), 4. Manley Hot Springs, 5. Fortymile, 6. Klondike, 7. Kantishna, 8. Yentna.University of Alaska Mining and Mineral Resources Research Institute.Placer mining in Alaska II -- Selected references -- List of figures
The prevalence and impact of Fusarium Head Blight pathogens and mycotoxins on malting barley quality in UK
Fusarium head blight (FHB) caused by Fusarium and Microdochium species can significantly affect the yield of barley grain as well as the quality and safety of malt and beer. The present study provides new knowledge on the impacts of the FHB pathogen complex on the malting and brewing quality parameters of naturally infected barley. Quantitative real-time PCR and liquid chromatography double mass spectrometry were used to quantify the predominant FHB pathogens and Fusarium mycotoxins, respectively, in commercially grown UK malting barley samples collected between 2007 and 2011. The predominant Fusarium species identified across the years were F. poae, F. tricinctum and F. avenaceum. Microdochium majus was the predominant Microdochium species in 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2011 whilst Microdochium nivale predominated in 2009. Deoxynivalenol and zearalenone quantified in samples collected between 2007 and 2009 were associated with F. graminearum and F. culmorum, whilst HT-2 and T-2, and nivalenol in samples collected between 2010 and 2011 correlated positively with F. langsethiae and F. poae, respectively. Analysis of the regional distribution and yearly variation in samples from 2010 to 2011 showed significant differences in the composition of the FHB species complex. In most regions (Scotland, the South and North of England) the harvest in 2010 had higher concentrations of Fusarium spp. than in 2011, although no significant difference was observed in the Midlands between the two years. Microdochium DNA was significantly higher in 2011 and in the North of England and Scotland compared to the South or Midlands regions. Pathogens of the FHB complex impacted negatively on grain yield and quality parameters. Thousand grain weight of malting barley was affected significantly by M. nivale and M. majus whilst specific weight correlated negatively with F. avenaceum and F. graminearum. To determine the impact of sub-acute infections of the identified Fusarium and Microdochium species on malting and brewing quality of naturally infected samples, selected malting barley cultivars (Optic, Quench and Tipple) were micromalted and subjected to malt and wort analysis of key quality parameters. F. poae and M. nivale decreased germinative energy and increased water sensitivity of barley. The fungal biomass of F. poae and F. langsethiae correlated with increased wort free amino nitrogen and with decreased extract of malt. DNA of M. nivale correlated with increased malt friability as well as decreased wort filtration volume. The findings of this study indicate that the impact of species such as the newly emerging F. langsethiae, as well as F. poae and the two non-toxigenic Microdochium species should be considered when evaluating the quality of malting barley. © 2014
Validation of Observed Bedload Transport Pathways Using Morphodynamic Modeling
Phenomena related to braiding, including local scour and fill, channel bar development, migration
and avulsion, make numerical morphodynamic modeling of braided rivers challenging. This paper investigates
the performance of a Delft3D model, in a 2D depth-averaged formulation, to simulate the
morphodynamics of an anabranch of the Rees River (New Zealand). Model performance is evaluated using
data from field surveys collected on the falling limb of a major high flow, and using several sediment
transport formulas. Initial model results suggest that there is generally good agreement between observed and
modeled bed levels. However, some discrepancies in the bed level estimations were noticed, leading to bed
level, water depth and water velocity estimation errors
Near optimal configurations in mean field disordered systems
We present a general technique to compute how the energy of a configuration
varies as a function of its overlap with the ground state in the case of
optimization problems. Our approach is based on a generalization of the cavity
method to a system interacting with its ground state. With this technique we
study the random matching problem as well as the mean field diluted spin glass.
As a byproduct of this approach we calculate the de Almeida-Thouless transition
line of the spin glass on a fixed connectivity random graph.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
A Graph Theoretic Approach for Object Shape Representation in Compositional Hierarchies Using a Hybrid Generative-Descriptive Model
A graph theoretic approach is proposed for object shape representation in a
hierarchical compositional architecture called Compositional Hierarchy of Parts
(CHOP). In the proposed approach, vocabulary learning is performed using a
hybrid generative-descriptive model. First, statistical relationships between
parts are learned using a Minimum Conditional Entropy Clustering algorithm.
Then, selection of descriptive parts is defined as a frequent subgraph
discovery problem, and solved using a Minimum Description Length (MDL)
principle. Finally, part compositions are constructed by compressing the
internal data representation with discovered substructures. Shape
representation and computational complexity properties of the proposed approach
and algorithms are examined using six benchmark two-dimensional shape image
datasets. Experiments show that CHOP can employ part shareability and indexing
mechanisms for fast inference of part compositions using learned shape
vocabularies. Additionally, CHOP provides better shape retrieval performance
than the state-of-the-art shape retrieval methods.Comment: Paper : 17 pages. 13th European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV
2014), Zurich, Switzerland, September 6-12, 2014, Proceedings, Part III, pp
566-581. Supplementary material can be downloaded from
http://link.springer.com/content/esm/chp:10.1007/978-3-319-10578-9_37/file/MediaObjects/978-3-319-10578-9_37_MOESM1_ESM.pd
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