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Books on the topic 'Ore grinding'

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1

Canada Centre for Mineral and Energy Technology. Ore characteristics that affect breakage during grinding. Ottawa, Ont: Canada Centre for Mineral and Energy Technology, 1988.

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2

Isaacson, A. E. Determining corrosion rates in industrial ore grinding environments. Pittsburgh, Pa: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, 1988.

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3

Canada Centre for Mineral and Energy Technology. Spoc Simulated Processing of Ore and Coal: Chapter 2.2 Grinding Circuit Sampling. S.l: s.n, 1985.

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4

Rule, A. R. Influence of an organic polymer in ball-mill grinding of quartz, dolomite, and copper ore. Pittsburgh, Pa: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, 1985.

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5

Rice, David A. Effects of turbomilling parameters on the simultaneous grinding and ferric sulfate leaching of chalcopyrite. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, 1991.

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6

A, Broussaud, and Canada Centre for Mineral and Energy Technology, eds. Modelling of an autogeneous grinding and flotation process: Application to the industrial processing of the Moinho complex sulphide ore. [s.l: s.n.]., 1989.

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7

"Die ode Gegend wurde zum Lustgarten umgeschaffen-- ": Zur Industriearchitektur der Textilfabrik Cromford, 1783-1977 (Schriften / Landschaftsverband Rheinland, Rheinisches Industriemuseum). In Kommission bei R. Habelt, 1991.

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8

Accinno, Michael. Disabled Union Veterans and the Performance of Martial Begging. Edited by Blake Howe, Stephanie Jensen-Moulton, Neil Lerner, and Joseph Straus. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199331444.013.20.

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This essay discusses the phenomenon of disabled Union veterans who turned to the profession of organ grinding during and after the American Civil War: they became mendicant musicians who played music in the streets to beg for money. Within a cultural logic that emphasized the sorting of worthy from unworthy poor—and “true” veterans from “imposters”—the related practices of street music and mendicancy were harshly stigmatized. Although artistic and literary representations of disabled organ grinders often used the performers as rhetorical devices to elicit fear, loathing, or pity, closer scrutiny of surviving documentary evidence reveals that the men indeed possessed agency, along with a capacity and desire for self-representation.
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9

Wilkinson, Benedict. Scripts of Terror. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197521892.001.0001.

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This book explores terrorism as a strategic choice-- one made carefully and deliberately by rational actors. Through an analysis of the terrorist groups of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Yemen, this book charts a series of different strategic ‘scripts’ at play in terrorist behavior, from survival, to efforts in mobilizing a supporter base, through to the grinding attrition of a long terrorist campaign. The theme that runs through all the organizations is the unbridgeable gap between their strategic vision, and what actually unfolds. Regardless of which script terrorists follow, they often fall short of achieving their political ambitions. And yet, despite its frequent failure, the terrorist strategy is returned to time and again-- people continue to join such groups, and to commit mindless acts of violence. Scripts of Terror explores the reasons behind this. It asks why, if terrorism is so rarely successful and so hard to pull off, its approach remains an appealing one. And it examines how terrorists formulate their strategies, and how they envisage achieving their ambitions through violence. Most importantly, it explores why they so often fail.
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10

Seitz, John C., and Christine Firer Hinze, eds. Working Alternatives. Fordham University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823288359.001.0001.

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Popular interest in the kinds of conditions that make work productive, growing media attention to the grinding cycle of poverty, and the widening sense that consumption must become sustainable and just, all contribute to an atmosphere thirsty for humanistic economic analysis. This volume offers such analysis from a novel and generative diversity of vantage points, including religious and secular histories, theological ethics, and business management. In particular, Working Alternatives brings modern Roman Catholic forms of engaging with economic questions—embodied in the evolving set of documents that make up the area of “Catholic social thought”—into conversation with one another and with non-Catholic experiments in economic thought and practice. Clustered not by discipline but by their emphasis on either 1) new ways of seeing economic practice 2) new ways of valuing human activity, or 3) implementation of new ways of working, the volume’s essays facilitate the necessarily interdisciplinary thinking demanded by the complexities of economic sustainability and justice. Collectively, the works gathered here assert and test a challenging and far-reaching hypothesis: economic theories, systems, and practices—ways of conceiving, organizing and enacting work, management, supply, production, exchange, remuneration, wealth, and consumption—rely on basic, often unexamined, presumptions about human personhood, relations, and flourishing.
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11

Parker, Philip M. The World Market for Numerically Controlled, Metalworking Flat-Surface Grinding Machines with the Capability of Positioning Any One Axis to an Accuracy ... 0.01 mm: A 2007 Global Trade Perspective. ICON Group International, Inc., 2006.

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12

The World Market for Numerically Controlled, Metalworking Flat-Surface Grinding Machines with the Capability of Positioning Any One Axis to an Accuracy ... 0.01 mm: A 2004 Global Trade Perspective. Icon Group International, Inc., 2005.

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13

Parker, Philip M. The 2007 Import and Export Market for Metalworking Flat-Surface Grinding Machines with the Capability of Positioning Any One Axis to an Accuracy of At ... Numerically Controlled Machines in India. ICON Group International, Inc., 2006.

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14

The World Market for Metalworking Flat-Surface Grinding Machines with the Capability of Positioning Any One Axis to an Accuracy of At Least 0.01 mm Excluding ... Machines: A 2004 Global Trade Perspective. Icon Group International, Inc., 2005.

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15

Parker, Philip M. The World Market for Metalworking Flat-Surface Grinding Machines with the Capability of Positioning Any One Axis to an Accuracy of At Least 0.01 mm Excluding ... Machines: A 2007 Global Trade Perspective. ICON Group International, Inc., 2006.

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16

Mitchell, Peter. The Donkey in Human History. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198749233.001.0001.

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Donkeys carried Christ into Jerusalem while in Greek myth they transported Hephaistos up to Mount Olympos and Dionysos into battle against the Giants. They were probably the first animals that people ever rode, as well as the first used on a large-scale as beasts of burden. Associated with kingship and the gods in the ancient Near East, they have been (and in many places still are) a core technology for moving people and goods over both short and long distances, as well as a supplier of muscle power for threshing and grinding grain, pressing olives, raising water, ploughing fields, and pulling carts, to name just a few of the uses to which they have been put. Yet despite this, they remain one of the least studied, and most widely ignored, of all domestic animals, consigned to the margins of history like so many of those who still depend upon them. Spanning the globe and extending from the donkey's initial domestication up to the present, this book seeks to remedy this situation by using archaeological evidence, in combination with insights from history and anthropology, to resituate the donkey (and its hybrid offspring such as the mule) in the unfolding of human history, looking not just at what donkeys and mules did, but also at how people have thought about and understood them. Intended in part for university researchers and students working in the broad fields of world history, archaeology, animal history, and anthropology, but it should also interest anyone keen to learn more about one of the most widespread and important of the animals that people have domesticated.
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17

Copley, Jack. Governing Financialization. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192897015.001.0001.

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Capitalism has become ‘financialized’. Since the 1970s, the swelling of financial markets and asset price bubbles has occurred alongside weaker underlying economic growth. Yet financialization was not a spontaneous market development—it was rather deeply political. States fuelled this process through policies of financial liberalization. Britain lies at the heart of this story. The British state’s radical financial liberalizations in the 1970s and 1980s were instrumental in creating a financialized global economic order in which the City of London emerged as a central hub. But why did the British state propel financialization? The conventional wisdom points to the lobbying power of financial elites and the strength of neoliberal ideology. However, this book offers an alternative explanation through an in-depth exploration of declassified state archives. By examining key financial liberalizations in the 1970s and 1980s—including the notorious ‘Big Bang’—this book argues that these policies were not part of an intentional scheme to create a new finance-led economic model. Instead, they were designed to address immediate governing dilemmas related to the grinding ‘stagflation’ crisis and its aftershocks. In this era, British governments found themselves trapped between global competitive pressures to enforce painful domestic adjustment and national political pressures to maintain existing living standards. Financial liberalization was pursued in a trial-and-error manner to navigate this dilemma. By unleashing financial markets, the state hoped to either postpone the worst effects of the crisis, or enact tough economic restructuring in an arm’s-length fashion. Financialization was an accidental outcome, not an intentional result.
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