• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 172
  • 11
  • 8
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 256
  • 256
  • 233
  • 93
  • 87
  • 33
  • 32
  • 29
  • 28
  • 25
  • 23
  • 18
  • 18
  • 17
  • 14
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

A relative moment tensor inversion technique applied to seismicity induced by mining

Andersen, Lindsay, Marguerite 18 July 2001 (has links)
Three hybrid moment tensor inversion methods were developed for seismic sources originating from a small source region. These techniques attempt to compensate for various types of systematic error (or noise) that influence seismograms recorded in the underground environment in order to achieve an accurate and robust measure of the seismic moment tensor. The term 'hybrid' was used to distinguish between the relative method proposed by Dahm (1995) and the methods developed in this thesis. The hybrid methods were essentially weighting schemes designed to enhance the accuracy of the computed moment tensors by decreasing the influence of any low quality observations, to damp (or amplify) any signals that have been overestimated (or underestimated) due to local site effects, and to correct for raypath focussing or defocussing that results from inhomogeneities in the rockmass. The weighting or correction applied to a particular observation was derived from the residuals determined when observed data were compared with corresponding theoretical data (for a particular geophone site, sensor orientation and wave phase) and were calculated using a cluster of events rather than a single event. The first and second weighting schemes were indirectly related to the mean and the median of the residuals where the residuals were defined as the ratio of the theoretical to observed data. In the third scheme, the residuals were defined as the difference between the observed and theoretical data and the weights were based on the distance of a data point (measured in standard deviations) from the mean residual. In each of the weighting schemes, the correction was applied iteratively until the standard error of the least-squares solution (normalised to the scalar seismic moment) was a minimum. The schemes were non-linear because new weights were calculated for each iteration. A number of stability tests using synthetic data were carried out to quantify the source resolving capabilities of the hybrid methods under various extreme conditions. The synthetic events were pure double-couple sources having identical fault-plane orientations, and differing only in rake. This similarity in the mechanisms was chosen because the waveforms of tightly grouped events recorded underground often show high degrees of similarity. For each test, the results computed using the three hybrid methods were compared with one another and with those computed using the single event, absolute method and two relative methods (with and without a reference mechanism). In the noise-free situation, it was found that the relative method without reference mechanism showed the highest resolution of mechanisms, provided that the coverage of the focal sphere was not too sparse (> 3 stations). The hybrid method using a median correction was found to be the most robust of all the methods tested in the most extreme case of poor coverage (2 stations) of the focal sphere. When increasing levels of pseudo-random noise were applied to the data, the absolute moment tensor inversion method, the hybrid method using a median correction, and the hybrid method using a weighted mean correction all showed similar robustness and stability in extreme configurations concerning network coverage of the focal sphere and noise level. When increasing levels of systematic noise were added to the data, the hybrid methods using a median correction and weighted mean correction were found to exhibit similar robustness and stability in extreme configurations concerning network coverage of the focal sphere and systematic noise. In all situations investigated, these two hybrid methods outperformed the relative and absolute methods. The hybrid moment tensor inversion methods using a median and weighted mean correction were applied to a cluster of 14 events, having remarkably similar waveforms, recorded at Oryx Gold Mine. For comparative purposes, the absolute method was also applied. The inputs to the inversion methods consisted of the spectral plateaus of both P- and S-waves at frequencies below the comer frequency of the time-integrated displacement traces. The polarities of dominant motion were used as an additional constraint and were determined from cross-correlation of observed with synthetic P- or S-waves. The solutions computed using the hybrid moment tensor inversion using a median correction displayed a distinct improvement after the iterative residual correction procedure was applied. The radiation patterns and faultplane solutions showed a high degree of similarity, and are probably more accurate reflections of reality than those computed using the absolute moment tensor inversion methods. These observations are very encouraging and point towards the method's potential for use as a standard processing tool for mine seismicity. The implications of this work are a better understanding of the focal mechanisms of seismic events induced by mining activities, ultimately leading to improved safety underground.
182

R. H. Bland and the Port Phillip and Colonial Gold Mining Company

Woodland, John George, woodland@bigpond.net.au January 2002 (has links)
There are numerous histories of the Victorian goldfields, individual digger�s experiences, and the digging community as a whole. By contrast, very little has been written about the early gold mining companies. This thesis seeks to address this dearth in part, with a longitudinal study of one of the leading gold mining companies in nineteenth-century Victoria. The Port Phillip and Colonial Gold Mining Company (�Port Phillip Company�) was one of many �gold bubble� companies formed in England during 1851-3 to undertake gold mining in Australia. Within a few years it was the only survivor of this episode of British corporate gold-fever. The thesis argues that the influence of Rivett Henry Bland, the company�s managing director, was instrumental in its success, particularly in its early years when faced with anti-company sentiment and unfavourable mining legislation. The company established a large-scale operation at Clunes in 1857, rapidly assuming a pre-eminent position in colonial gold mining with its superior technology and mining practices. Historians generally portray Australian gold mining operations as small, locally funded and inefficient, prior to British capital investment in the late 1880s. While true of the larger picture, this simply emphasises the uniqueness of the British-owned and funded Port Phillip Company, the largest and most efficient gold mining operation in Australia from 1857 until the early 1880s. The company and its investment offshoot, the Victoria (London) Mining Company, invested in over thirty Victorian gold mining companies during the 1860s. Again, this runs counter to the general view that British investment in Australian gold mining began only in the late 1880s. Although the two companies� investments equalled only a fraction of the later wave of British capital in absolute monetary terms, their contribution to the growth of the Victorian gold mining industry at the time was significant.
183

Distribution and mode of occurrence of gold in the Chibougamau District, Quebec.

Prochnau, John Franklin. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
184

Mercury Rising

Vice President Research, Office of the January 2008 (has links)
The use of mercury in artisanal mines is posing serious environmental and human health risks. Marcello Veiga is aiming to introduce global standards to regulate its use.
185

Impact of alluvial gold mining on surface water quality in the Revue basin-Manica District, Mozambique.

Vicente, Enoque Mendes. January 2000 (has links)
The upper part of the Revue basin in the Manica District, Mozambique is located in a mountainous area underlain by rocks of the Manica greenstone belt. This greenstone belt has alluvial gold deposits in the Revue river and its tributaries Chua and Zambuzi. Alluvial gold in the Manica District has been mined by local people using artisanal mining methods (panning) and by small scale companies. The recovery process of gold involves washing of the auriferous gravel with large quantities of water and the surface water quality has been impaired in this process. The aim of this dissertation is to assess the impact of alluvial gold mining on surface water quality in the Revue basin. Physical and chemical characteristics of the surface water were determined upstream of, within and downstream of the mining area and in the main tributaries immediately before flowing into the Revue river. Upstream of the mining area the water is clear and the rock types of the Manica greenstone belt are likely to be the only source of metals dissolved in the water. Metal concentrations are generally low except Cd, Mo and Ni but the water in this area meets all World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations for drinking water. In contrast within the mining area there are signs of pollution. The water is cloudy and the highest concentrations of most metals are found in the lower part of this area where mining activity is very intense. Thus, the alluvial gold mining is responsible for elevated metal concentrations and constitutes the major point source of pollution in the Revue basin. Water quality within the mining area has been affected and metals Ba, Pb and Mn have concentrations exceeding the WHO recommended values for drinking water. Downstream of the mining area the impounded water in the Chicamba Dam, which is the source of potable water for Chimoio City, reduces the water flow in the Revue river and sedimentation of suspended sediments occurs, together with associated adsorption and precipitation processes. This result in general improvement of water quality with only Ba and Pb concentrations remaining above the WHO recommended values for drinking water. Increase in concentration of metals AI, Ba, K, Pb and Sr occurring in the Chicamba Dam is likely to be due to input to the dam of water from rivers which cross the Granite-gneiss Complex. Geochemical speciation modelling using MINTEQA2 program suggests that the behaviour of metals Cr, AI, Mn and Fe is controlled by redox and precipitation reactions while the behaviour of As, Cd, Zn, Cu, Ni, Pb, Ba and Ca is controlled by adsorption on the sediment surfaces. Changes in environmental conditions, such as pH and dissolved organic matter (DOM) could result in metals being released back into the water. Modelling the effect of a change in pH and variation in DOM indicate that adsorption and precipitation would decrease with decreasing pH values and with increasing DOM. The chemical form of dissolved metals, the type of interactive processes (absorption and precipitation) and concentration of particulate matter gives the distribution of pollutants while the transport process affect the fate of pollutants in the Revue river water. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2000.
186

The Queensland gold-miner in the late nineteenth century : his influence and interests

Stoodley, June. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
187

The Queensland gold-miner in the late nineteenth century : his influence and interests

Stoodley, June. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
188

The Queensland gold-miner in the late nineteenth century : his influence and interests

Stoodley, June. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
189

The Queensland gold-miner in the late nineteenth century : his influence and interests

Stoodley, June. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
190

The Queensland gold-miner in the late nineteenth century : his influence and interests

Stoodley, June. Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0594 seconds