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  • Structural Monitoring of the Copper Mining Process
    For the safety of both miners and machinery, structural monitoring is essential for identifying any potentially dangerous situations early on.
  • CASE STUDY: Lumwana Mining Company (LMC) in Zambia, Africa
    Located in the central African country of Zambia, Lumwana Mining Company (LMC) processes low grade copper ore in a conventional plant at a capacity of 20 million dry tonnes per annum. To optimise operation and to facilitate ramp-up to full production, LMC chose to install an advanced process
  • Dual Bulk Bag Filling/Palletizing System Fills 30 Tons/H of Copper Concentrate
    Vale Canada Limited operates one of the largest integrated mining facilities in the world here, mining and processing ores containing nickel, copper and other metals.
  • Non-Contacting Flow Solution For Heap Leach Mining
    Minera Escondida, the world's largest single producer of copper, was faced with a challenge in their heap leaching process in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile. Finding an accurate, reliable non-contacting flow meter was a difficult task. But Greyline Instruments developed a unique area-velocity
  • Pond De-Watering Solutions from GATOR PUMP
    is the potential for long term storage of environmentally hazardous material. Copper, gold, iron, uranium and other mining operations produce varied kinds of waste, much of it toxic, which pose varied challenges for long-term containment.
  • How Are Magnets Made
    " is a reference to the fact that they are unevenly distributed through the earth 's crust as opposed to materials mined in seams such as coal and copper. The first step in making neodymium magnets is, of course, mining the raw neodymium material from the earth. From there, the manufacturing process begins.
  • Cyanide Destruction Monitoring with pH and ORP
    Mining and electroplating processes generate waste materials containing alkaline, rare earth metals, and other heavy metals such as iron, nickel, zinc, cadmium, copper, silver, and gold. The wastes often contain cyanide, a deadly poison. Federal and State regulatory agencies require that cyanide

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