User:Sean.hoyland/tmp2

Edward Salle
http://www.alcheringa-gallery.com/artists.html?do=view&artist=257

geology of png
Geology: Papua New Guinea (PNG) lies at the northern end of the Australian Plate and has three major components: a continental cratonic platform, an arc of volcanic islands and a central collisional fold belt, consisting of Mesozoic sediments, ophiolite sequences, tertiary sediments and diorite intrusions. During collision, the Wau Graben, the host of major gold and silver deposits, was formed in the fold belt. It coincided with a phase of volcanic activity, resulting in precious and base metals deposits being formed. These include epithermal gold deposits at Hidden Valley, Hamata, Kerimenge and Wafi and porphyry-style copper deposits such as Golpu. Numerous other gold and copper-gold prospects, which are at various stages of exploration and evaluation, occur on Harmony’s lease areas.http://www.har.co.za/res_res_png.htm

simberi
history After the Japanese retreat from Guadal-canal, as part of their "self-support" official dictum, local people were used to plant about thirty acres of tobacco and rice and thousands of pounds of sweet potato.

carbon-in-leach process

A process step wherein granular activated carbon particles much larger than the ground ore particles are introduced into the ore pulp. Cyanide leaching and precious metals adsorption onto the activated carbon occur simultaneously. The loaded activated carbon is mechanically screened to separate it from the barren ore pulp and processed to remove the precious metals and prepare it for reuse.http://www.maden.hacettepe.edu.tr/dmmrt/dmmrt182.html#d3807 Gold cyanidation

3. Carbon-In-Leach (CIL). : The carbon-in-leach process integrates leaching and carbon-in-pulp into a single unit process operation. Leach tanks are fitted with carbon retention screens and the CIP tanks are eliminated. Carbon is added in leach so that the gold is adsorbed onto carbon almost as soon as it is dissolved by the cyanide solution. The CIL process is frequently used when native carbon is present in the gold ore. This native carbon will adsorb the leached gold and prevent its recovery. This phenomenon is referred to commonly as "preg-robbing". The carbon added in CIL is more active than native carbon, so the gold will be preferentially adsorbed by carbon that can be recovered for stripping. The CIL process will frequently be used in small cyanide mills to reduce the complexity and cost of the circuit.

There are several disadvantages to CIL compared with CIP. Carbon loading will be 20 to 30% less than with CIP, which means more carbon has to be stripped. (This disadvantage may be overcome by a hybrid circuit, incorporating a cross between CIL and CIP.) The CIL process requires a larger carbon inventory in the circuit, which results in a larger in-process tie up of gold. The larger carbon inventory can also result in higher carbon (and gold) losses through carbon attrition.

http://museumvictoria.com.au/pages/14376/aflynn_cv.pdf try to find NSR (2003). Environmental Baseline Study. A report prepared for Simberi Mining Joint Venture for the Simberi Oxide Gold Project, Papua New Guinea http://earth.jsc.nasa.gov/scripts/sseop/photo.pl?mission=ISS012&roll=E&frame=12989&QueryResultsFile=127565422338401.tsv image source

http://www.minesite.com/nc/minews/singlenews/article/allied-golds-success-on-the-remote-island-of-simberi-gives-its-ambitious-bid-for-australian-solomon.html

http://www.mpi.org.au/simberi.aspx

http://www.minesite.com/companies/comp_single/company/allied-gold-ltd.html

http://www.sharecast.com/cgi-bin/sharecast/story.cgi?story_id=3661561

http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=gl&u=http://gl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simberi&ei=xKqITPLmIIeavgPwzuCPBA&sa=X&oi=translate&ct=result&resnum=1&sqi=2&ved=0CBUQ7gEwAA&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dhttp://gl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simberi%26hl%3Den%26site%3Dwebhp%26prmd%3Div

http://www.digitallook.com/news/rns/683945-172861/AGLD-Admission_to_AIM.html

http://www.oceandots.com/pacific/png/simberi.php

http://www.minesite.com/fileadmin/content/pdfs/Brokers_Notes_August_09/Brokers_Notes_Sept_09/Brokers_Notes_Oct_09/Brokers_Notes_Nov_09/Mirabaud%20Mining%20Weekly_041109.pdf

http://www.australianbusinessjournal.com.au/allied-gold-limited/

http://www.growthcompany.co.uk/news/1052957/allied-examines-extension.thtml

http://www.alliedgold.com.au

Quisqualis indica pollinator partioning http://www.jstor.org/pss/2995472 http://www.journal.su.ac.th/index.php/sustj/article/viewFile/107/108

Royal Robertson

 * http://2012diaries.blogspot.com/2009/10/outsider-art-prophet-royal-robertson.html
 * http://www.yarddog.com/component/page,shop.browse/category_id,61/option,com_virtuemart/Itemid,4/vmcchk,1/
 * http://wn.com/Royal_Robertson_at_SUNDAY_GALLERY
 * http://oneartworld.com/artists/P/Prophet+Royal+Robertson.html
 * http://collections.thebrogan.org/code/emuseum.asp?emu_action=searchrequest&moduleid=2&profile=people&currentrecord=1&searchdesc=Royal%20Robertson&style=single&rawsearch=constituentid/,/is/,/14/,/false/,/true
 * http://www.intuoutsiderart.com/rRobertson.shtm
 * http://www.shortbusgallery.com/artists/rev_robertson.html
 * http://www.webbartgallery.com/artist/royal/royal.html
 * http://www.amazon.com/Encyclopedia-American-Folk-Gerard-Wertkin/dp/0415929865/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1283706862&sr=1-1#reader_0415929865
 * http://www.orangehillart.com/ArtistDetail.asp?ArtistID=1062
 * http://dulltooldimbulb.blogspot.com/2009/01/prophet-royal-robertson.html
 * http://www.barbaraarcher.com/artists/robertson/index.html
 * http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=52139025422#!/group.php?gid=52139025422&v=wall nice photos of him
 * http://americanart.si.edu/collections/search/artwork/results/?id=7409 smithsonian collection
 * http://www.gordongallery.net/robertson.html IMAGE
 * http://www.liveauctioneers.com/catalog/1336/page12 SEVERAL IMAGES

Arthur Stoll (8 January 1887 - 13 January 1971, Dornach) was a Swiss biochemist and art collector. http://www.jstor.org/pss/769674 http://www.niemeyer-artbooks.com/artbook/10605_e.php

Early life
Stoll was born on 8 January 1887 in Schinznach-Dorf, Aargau, Switzerland. The son of a teacher and school principal studied chemistry at the ETH Zurich, where he was in 1911 when Richard Willstatter Dr. sc.nat to. doctorate was. In 1912 he became research assistant at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry in Berlin with Richard Willstatter, with whom he substantial evidence on the importance of chlorophyll in plant physiology explored. In 1917 he became professor of chemistry at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich appointed. In the same year he received an appointment as head of the pharmaceutical department of the chemical factory in Basel (now Novartis ). In this company he was from 1949 to 1956 President of the Directorate, from 1964 he held the office of President of the Board. Stoll has developed with his staff, a number of methods for the manufacture of drugs. So he succeeded for the first time the isolation of ergot alkaloids (as ergotamine and Ergobasin ), and digitalis, the drug than are used in heart disease. Next were soluble method for producing calcium salts developed. One of his main achievements is that he managed a number of pharmacologically active substances from a ' total drug isolate "and as specific and effective therapeutic purpose precisely fitted to individual substances.

He died on 13 January 1971 in Dornach.

Honors
Member of the German Academy of Natural Scientists Leopoldina (since 1937) Foreign Member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (from 1948) Several honorary doctorates

Publications
Willstätter Richard und Arthur Stoll: Untersuchungen über Chlorophyll: Methoden und Ergebnisse. Berlin 1913. Willstätter Richard and Arthur Stoll: Studies on chlorophyll: methods and results. Berlin 1913th VIII, 424 S. VIII, 424 p. Willstätter, Richard und Arthur Stoll: Über die chemischen Einrichtungen des Assimilationsapparates. Berlin. Willstätter, Richard and Arthur Stoll: On the chemical facilities of the assimilation apparatus. Berlin. 1915. 1915th In: Sitzungsberichte der Königlich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1915, II., S.322-346. In: Proceedings of the Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences, 1915, II, S.322-346. Willstätter, Richard und Arthur Stoll: Über die Assimilation ergrünender Blätter. Berlin 1915. Willstätter, Richard and Arthur Stoll: On the assimilation greening leaves. Berlin 1915th