Academic literature on the topic 'Broken Hill South Pty'

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Journal articles on the topic "Broken Hill South Pty"

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Yellowlees, Peter M., and Anil V. Kaushik. "The Broken Hill Psychopathology Project." Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 26, no. 2 (June 1992): 197–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000486749202600203.

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The main objective of this study was to describe the psychiatric disorders seen in patients presenting for treatment in rural New South Wales. The patients were seen primarily in the community, in both public and private practice, but also in the local base hospital and prison. Seven hundred and seven patients were consecutively examined during the study period. The results of this study were compared with a previous Australia-wide study to identify specific disorders that were more prevalent in rural areas. Alcohol abuse and dependence stood out as being much more prevalent. Life problems such as domestic violence, sexual assault, and incest occurred commonly in women referred for psychiatric assessment. More than ten percent of the study patients were children aged under 17, who had similar prevalence rates of the various psychiatric disorders to a national comparison. It is concluded that alcohol abuse is very common in rural New South Wales, particularly in men, although there are also high rates in women, and this is probably related, in part at least, to the high rates of domestic violence, sexual assault and incest. It appears probable that there is a cycle of alcohol abuse in men leading to domestic violence and sexual abuse in women and children. This may contribute to the latter becoming anxious and depressed. The rates of the major functional psychiatric disorders were similar to those seen nationally. There is a great need for the maldistribution of psychiatrists between metropolitan and rural areas to be addressed.
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Inegbenebor, A. I., P. A. Williams, R. E. Bevins, M. P. Lambert, and Alan D. Hart. "Composition of pyromorphites from Broken Hill, New South Wales." Records of the Australian Museum, Supplement 15 (October 16, 1992): 29–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.3853/j.0812-7387.15.1992.81.

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Carr, P. F., B. Selleck, M. Stott, and P. Williamson. "NATIVE LEAD AT BROKEN HILL, NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA." Canadian Mineralogist 46, no. 1 (February 1, 2008): 73–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.3749/canmin.46.1.73.

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Birch, W. D. "Zinc-manganese carbonates from Broken Hill, New South Wales." Mineralogical Magazine 50, no. 355 (March 1986): 49–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1986.050.355.07.

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AbstractSpecimens of honey-brown to pinkish-brown globular carbonates encrusting concretionary goethite–coronadite from the oxidized zone at Broken Hill, New South Wales, have compositions in the rhodochrosite–smithsonite series. This may be the first extensive natural occurrence of this solid-solution series. Growth of the carbonates occurred in zones which have near uniform composition. The ratio MnCO3/(MnCO3 + ZnCO3) for each zone bears a linear relationship to the measured d spacing for the 104 X-ray reflections. Because cerussite is the only other mineral associated with the Zn-Mn carbonates and because of an absence of detailed locality information, the paragenetic significance of these minerals cannot be determined. The solutions depositing them may have been derived from the near-surface equivalents of the Zinc Lode horizons.
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Birch, William D. "Broken Hill New South Wales, Australia: Its Contribution to Mineralogy." Rocks & Minerals 82, no. 1 (January 2007): 40–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.3200/rmin.82.1.40-49.

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Millsteed, Paul W. "Faceting Transparent Rhodonite from Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia." Gems & Gemology 42, no. 2 (June 1, 2006): 151–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.5741/gems.42.2.151.

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Millsteed, P. W. "Marshite–miersile solid solution and iodargyrite from Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia." Mineralogical Magazine 62, no. 04 (August 1998): 471–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/002646198547846.

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Abstract Microprobe analysis of marshite and miersite from Broken Hill, Australia, demonstrate extensive solid solution between the end-members CuI and AgI, indicating the possibility of a complete solid-solution series. Unit-cell parameters increase from 6.054 Å for marshite to 6.504 Å for miersite, closely following Vegard's Law. The Cu content of iodargyrite is generally below the limit of detection, but one zoned crystal contained 0.28 wt.% Cu. Crystallization of either miersite or iodargyrite at Broken Hill appears to be dependent upon the local availability and ratio of copper, silver and iodine ions.
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Parr, Joanna. "The preservation of pre-metamorphic colloform banding in pyrite from the Broken Hill-type Pinnacles deposit, New South Wales, Australia." Mineralogical Magazine 58, no. 392 (September 1994): 461–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1994.058.392.11.

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AbstractTwo distinct generations of pyrite, with different morphologies, are described from the Proterozoic Broken Hill-type Pinnacles deposit in western NSW. The earlier, py1, forms concentric layers interpreted as colloform banding. Although the textures are somewhat similar to those observed in supergene alteration zones, textural relationships in fresh rocks suggest that these are pre-metamorphic and that the pyrite formed as the result of precipitation from hydrothermal fluids in open veins, vugs and fissures. The second generation, py2, post-dates py1 and forms euhedral overgrowths on it. It is interpreted as being synchronous with the main phase of base metal sulphide mineralisation. The textures reported here are previously unrecorded for Broken Hill-type mineralisation, and have implications for the regional identification of feeder zones to the Broken Hill deposit. The evidence supports a model in which mineralising conditions at the Pinnacles were characterised by slightly higher oxygen and lower sulphur fugacity (further constrained by Fe contents of sphalerite) than at Broken Hill, where pyrrhotite is the major Fe sulphide.The pre-metamorphic textures observed in the pyrite at the Pinnacles deposit are also unusual because they have survived granulite facies metamorphism and five phases of deformation, whereas previously the preservation of such textures has not been recognised at metamorphic grades greater than amphibolite facies.
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YOUNG, GRANT M. "Neoproterozoic glaciation in the Broken Hill area, New South Wales, Australia." Geological Society of America Bulletin 104, no. 7 (July 1992): 840–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1992)104<0840:ngitbh>2.3.co;2.

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Birch, W. D., E. A. J. Burke, V. J. Wall, and M. A. Etheridge. "Ecandrewsite, the zinc analogue of ilmenite, from Little Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia, and the San Valentin Mine, Sierra de Cartegena, Spain." Mineralogical Magazine 52, no. 365 (April 1988): 237–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1988.052.365.10.

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AbstractEcandrewsite, the zinc analogue of ilmenite, is a new mineral which was first described from the Broken Hill lode in 1970 and discovered subsequently in ores from Little Broken Hill (New South Wales) and the San Valentin Mine, Spain. The name ‘ecandrewsite’ was used in a partial description of the mineral in ‘Minerals of Broken Hill’ (1982), thereby establishing the Little Broken Hill locality, specifically the Melbourne Rockwell Mine, as the type locality. Microprobe analysis of ecandrewsite from the type locality gave ZnO 30.42 (wt.%), FeO (total Fe) 11.37, MnO 7.64, TiO2 50.12, total 99.6%, yielding an empirical formula of (Zn0.59Fe0.24Mn0.17)1.00Ti0.99O3 based on 3 oxygen atoms. All compositions from Little Broken Hill and the San Valentin Mine are ferroan manganoan ecandrewsite. The strongest lines in the X-ray powder diffraction data are (d in Å, (hkil), I/Io):2.746, (104), 100; 2.545, (110), 80; 1.867, (024), 40; 3.734, (012), 30; 1.470, (3030), 30; 1.723, (116), 25. Ecandrewsite is hexagonal, space group RR3¯ assigned from a structural study, with a = 5.090(1), c = 14.036(2)Å, V = 314.6(3)Å3, Z = 6, D(calc.) = 4.99. The mineral is opaque, dark brown to black with a similar streak, and a submetallic lustre. In plane polarized light the reflection colour is greyish white with a pinkish tinge. Reflection pleochroism is weak, but anisotropism is strong with colours from greenish grey to dark brownish grey. Reflectance data in air between 470 and 650 nm are given. At the type locality, ecandrewsite forms disseminated tabular euhedral grains up to 250 × 50 µm, in quartz-rich metasediments. Associated minerals include almandine-spessartine, ferroan gahnite and rutile. The name is for E. C. Andrews, pioneering geologist in the Broken Hill region of New South Wales. Type material consisting of one grain is preserved in the Museum of Victoria (M35700). The mineral and name were approved by the IMA Commission on New Minerals and Mineral Names in 1979.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Broken Hill South Pty"

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Wozga, Miroslaw Jacek. "Investigation of local fold plunge reversals present at Pasminco's Southern Operations, Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia /." Title page, table of contents and abstract only, 1991. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09SB/09sbw938.pdf.

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Lipson, Rael Desmond. "Lithogeochemistry and origin of metasediments hosting the Broken Hill Deposit, Aggeneys, South Africa, and implications for ore genesis." Doctoral thesis, University of Cape Town, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23684.

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Mouat, Jeremy. "Mining in the settler dominions : a comparative study of the industry in three communities from the 1880s to the First World War." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29037.

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This dissertation examines the evolution of the mining industry in three British dominions during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Adopting a case study approach, it describes the establishment and growth of mining in Rossland, British Columbia; Broken Hill, New South Wales; and Waihi, New Zealand. Separate chapters trace developments in each area, focussing on the emergence of organised labour, the growth of mining companies and the sophistication of mining operations. These underline the need to consider diverse themes, maintaining that the mining industry's pattern of growth can be understood only by adopting such a broad approach. Following the three case studies, the final chapters of the dissertation offer a comparative analysis of Rossland, Waihi and Broken Hill. The study emphasises the similarities of these three communities, especially the cycle of growth, and identifies a crucial common denominator. Despite differences in climate, in the type and nature of the ore deposit and in the scale of mining activity, all three areas experienced a common trajectory of initial boom followed by subsequent retrenchment. The changing character of the resource base forced this fundamental alteration of productive relations. In each region, the mineral content of the ore declined as the mines went deeper. In addition, with depth the ore tended to become more difficult to treat. Faced with a decline in the value of the product of their mines, companies had to adopt sweeping changes in order to maintain profitable operations. This re-structuring was accomplished in a variety of ways, but the most significant factors, common to Rossland, Broken Hill and Waihi, were the heightened importance of applied science and economies of scale. Both developments underlined the growing importance of the mining engineer and technological innovations, principally in milling and smelting operations. In addition, new non-selective extractive techniques reduced the significance of skilled underground labour. The re-structuring of the industry not only had similar causes but also had a similar effect. The comparative chapter on labour relations, for example, argues that these managerial initiatives were closely associated with militant episodes in each community. While the leading companies in Rossland, Waihi and Broken Hill successfully reduced their working costs, they all faced the same ultimate end. Their long-term success or failure reflected the skill with which they coped with the inevitable depletion of their ore body. The common experience of Rossland, Waihi and Broken Hill demonstrates the importance of placing colonial development within a larger context. Regional historians should make greater use of the comparative approach, rather than continuing to focus on the unique and the particular.
Arts, Faculty of
History, Department of
Graduate
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Rutherford, Lachlan Stuart. "Developing a tectonic framework for the Southern Curnamona Cu - Au Province : geochemical and radiogenic isotope applications." 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2440/37818.

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"Two independent geochronological techniques specifically targeting post-kinematic or late-stage growth of kyanite, staurolite and late-stage garnet in the southern Curnamona Province has found that these minerals grew during the Delamerian Orogeny (~530-500 Ma). Prograde metamorphism during the Delamerian Orogeny attained kyanite-staurolite-garnet grade (amphibolite-facies). Previous interpretations of an anticlockwise P-T path for the Olarian Orogeny need revising, as these interpretations have been shown in this study to be based on textural relationships spanning ~1100 million years. This highlights the importance of in situ geochronological techniques in defining robust P-T-t paths for a region." --p. 121 of source document.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 2006.
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Books on the topic "Broken Hill South Pty"

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Built on silver: A history of Broken Hill South. Melbourne: Hill of Content, 1986.

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Scheibner, Erwin, C. M. Powell, and Ross Spencer. Broken Hill-Sydney Tasman-Sea Transect: New South Wales, Eastern Australia. Washington, D. C.: American Geophysical Union, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/gt005.

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G, Barnes Robert. Metallogenic studies of the Broken Hill and Euriowie Blocks, New South Wales. [Sydney, N.S.W.]: Dept. of Mineral Resources, Geological Survey of New South Wales, 1988.

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Scheibner, Erwin. Broken Hill-Sydney-Tasman Sea Transect New South Wales, Eastern Australia (Global Geoscience Transect). American Geophysical Union, 1991.

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Silver Lies, Golden Truths: Broken Hill, a Gentle German and Two World Wars. Wakefield Press Pty, Limited, 2015.

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Khatun, Samia. Australianama. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190922603.001.0001.

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Australian deserts remain dotted with the ruins of old mosques. Beginning with a Bengali poetry collection discovered in a nineteenth-century mosque in the town of Broken Hill, Samia Khatun weaves together the stories of various peoples colonized by the British Empire to chart a history of South Asian diaspora. Australia has long been an outpost of Anglo empires in the Indian Ocean world, today the site of military infrastructure central to the surveillance of 'Muslim-majority' countries across the region. Imperial knowledges from Australian territories contribute significantly to the Islamic-Western binary of the post- Cold War era. In narrating a history of Indian Ocean connections from the perspectives of those colonized by the British, Khatun highlights alternative contexts against which to consider accounts of non-white people. Australianama challenges a central idea that powerfully shapes history books across the Anglophone world: the colonial myth that European knowledge traditions are superior to the epistemologies of the colonized. Arguing that Aboriginal and South Asian language sources are keys to the vast, complex libraries that belie colonized geographies, Khatun shows that stories in colonized tongues can transform the very ground from which we view past, present and future.
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Book chapters on the topic "Broken Hill South Pty"

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McClung, Craig R., and Fanus Viljoen. "Mineralogical Assessment of the Metamorphosed Broken Hill Sulfide Deposit, South Africa: Implications for Processing Complex Orebodies." In Proceedings of the 10th International Congress for Applied Mineralogy (ICAM), 427–34. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-27682-8_51.

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Stalder, Marcel, and Abraham Rozendaal. "Trace and rare earth element chemistry of garnet and apatite as discriminant for Broken Hill-Type mineralization, Namaqua Province, South Africa." In Mineral Deposit Research: Meeting the Global Challenge, 699–702. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-27946-6_178.

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Khatun, Samia. "To Hear." In Australianama, 169–86. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190922603.003.0008.

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Returning to the copy of Kasasol Ambia in Broken Hill, chapter 8 revisits the central question that underpins this book: Who brought the com- pendium of Bengali poetry to this inland Australian town? Focusing in upon the aural forms of knowledge transmission that this book was embedded in, I show that the forms of historical storytelling that the book reveals remain in circulation today in both contemporary South Asia and Australia. With the Kasasol Ambia pointing to another epistemic ground on which past South Asians situated historical storytelling, I demonstrate that we can use the text today to produce new forms of human ontology. This concluding chapter argues that at our current juncture of not only escalating state violence and racism, but also ecological crisis, historians and activists alike must challenge the epistemic arrogance of colonial-modern thought if we are to glimpse better futures.
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Khatun, Samia. "The Book of Books." In Australianama, 1–26. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190922603.003.0001.

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Examining past ‘misreadings’ of a copy of Kasasol Ambia in the Australian mining town of Broken Hill that has long been mislabeled a Quran in Australian history books, this chapter challenges one of the central problems of English language historiography today: The systematic subjugation of colonised knowledges to produce dead objects and artifacts. Examining the Indian Ocean geography that the Kasasol Ambia circulated I piece together the contours of colonial-modern historical storytelling in South Asia and Australia. Placing Australia within histories of the Indian Ocean world, I approach this arena as a key terrain of Anglo empires and a site of ongoing epistemic struggle. Showing that the Kasasol Ambia can offer clues for how to use colonised people’s knowledge traditions to think, theorise and understand the Indian Ocean world, this chapter develops a framework for producing anti-colonial knowledes about the region.
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Broughton, Chad. "Reshoring Up." In Boom, Bust, Exodus. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199765614.003.0021.

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It was Late on a sunny, but bitterly cold mid-February afternoon. Michael Patrick, red-eared from the chill, cast a long shadow across the rough concrete that used to be the Appliance City factory floor. A few months earlier, two-thirds of the expansive ruin had been razed. It was now an extended chinhigh pile of crumbled bricks, broken cinderblocks, mangled rebar, and cornyellow insulation chunks. Patrick, dressed in a corduroy jacket, wool trousers, and a brown wool fedora, remarked that there was little now to stop the bitter Arctic winds that swept through the enormous demolition site. One could see clear through to the Henry C. Hill Correctional Center across the tracks and farther north on Illinois Route 41. The razed portion of the former factory was big enough to fit twenty football fields, side by side. The newest part of the factory was still standing, but vacant. The California-based investment company that owned the property hoped that clearing the “old, antiquated industrial real estate” would make the remaining property more attractive to potential buyers. “When you’re here,” Patrick said, “you think about the people. It was the blood, sweat, and tears of the workers that made this place run. It was ours, you know? We had different owners come and go but we made it run.” He pushed his hands deep into his jacket pockets and shrugged. It was early 2013, and Patrick could mark fifty-four years since he and Bob Dennison, Doug’s father, started packing insulation at Admiral’s Midwest Manufacturing plant on January 26, 1959. Patrick lived alone in a modest brick house on South Pleasant Avenue, just across the BNSF tracks, less than a mile away. The 72-year-old retiree hibernated in the winter, but managed to make each of his granddaughter’s sixth-grade basketball games. When the weather warmed, Patrick took his late model minivan to antique shows, estate sales, and collectors’ conventions. He collected license plates and license plate toppers, die-cast cars, and other trinkets. Earlier that day, over lunch at the Landmark Cafe, we had discussed the wage pressures, retiree obligations, and foreign competition that faced Maytag in the early 2000s.
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Reports on the topic "Broken Hill South Pty"

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Kositcin, N., J. A. Fitzherbert, P. T. Main, and K. Waltenberg. New SHRIMP U-Pb zircon provenance and in situ monazite metamorphic ages from the Mount Robe Subblock, Broken Hill, New South Wales: July 2015–June 2017. Geoscience Australia and Geological Survey of New South Wales, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.11636/record.2018.050.

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