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United States Bureau of Mines
産業: Mining
Number of terms: 33118
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
The U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) was the primary United States Government agency conducting scientific research and disseminating information on the extraction, processing, use, and conservation of mineral resources. Founded on May 16, 1910, through the Organic Act (Public Law 179), USBM's missions ...
A cross handle attached at the top of a column of drill rods by means of which the rods and attached bit are turned after each drop in chop-and-wash operations while sinking a borehole through overburden.
Industry:Mining
A cross handle attached at the top of a column of drill rods by means of which the rods and attached bit are turned after each drop in chop-and-wash operations while sinking a borehole through overburden.
Industry:Mining
A cross vein running at approx. right angles to the main orebody.
Industry:Mining
A crosscutting intrusive body of plutonic rock that narrows downward.
Industry:Mining
A crossover switch that consists essentially of a single-acting cylinder hoist on a crossrail fastened to the roof at right angles to the track. While a car is being loaded, the switcher picks up the empty car next to the locomotive and holds it to one side. As soon as a car is loaded the locomotive pulls the train back past the switcher, and the empty car is placed at the front of the train and pushed under the slide.
Industry:Mining
A cross-track scanner deployed on Landsat that records seven bands of data from the visible through the thermal IR regions. See: multispectral scanner.
Industry:Mining
A crowbar.
Industry:Mining
A crucible lined with charcoal or lampblack, and used for the reduction of oxides of metals to the metallic state. The crucible is prepared by ramming it full of lampblack or charcoal, and then excavating a portion of its contents and polishing the lining with a burnisher.
Industry:Mining
A crucible.
Industry:Mining
A crude oil obtained from bituminous shales, esp. in Scotland, by submitting them to destructive distillation in special retorts.
Industry:Mining