Academic literature on the topic 'Newcastle Coal'

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Journal articles on the topic "Newcastle Coal"

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Eklund, Erik. "Negotiating Industrial Heritage and Regional Identity in Three Australian Regions." Public Historian 39, no. 4 (November 1, 2017): 44–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/tph.2017.39.4.44.

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This article investigates the relationship between industrial heritage and regional identity during deindustrialization in three Australian regions. Newcastle, in the state of New South Wales (NSW), was a coal-mining and steel-production center located north of Sydney. Wollongong, also in NSW, was a coal-mining and steel-production region centered around Port Kembla, near the town of Wollongong. The Latrobe Valley was a brown coal-mining and electricity-production center east of Melbourne. All regions display a limited profile for industrial heritage within their formal policies and representations. In Newcastle and Wollongong, the adoption of the language of the postindustrial city has limited acknowledgement of the industrial past, while the Latrobe Valley’s industrial heritage is increasingly framed by concerns over current economic challenges and climate change.
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Mcnally, G. H., and D. F. Branagan. "Geotechnical consequences of the Newcastle Coal Measures rocks." Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 61, no. 3 (October 25, 2013): 363–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08120099.2013.841753.

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Gupta, R. P. "Coal research in Newcastle—past, present and future." Fuel 84, no. 10 (July 2005): 1176–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2004.09.028.

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Lindsay, Grahame, and Chris Herbert. "Coal and conglomerate in the Newcastle Coal Measures—coeval facies or temporally unrelated?" International Journal of Coal Geology 51, no. 3 (August 2002): 169–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0166-5162(02)00083-6.

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Mason, I., S. Greenhalgh, and P. Hatherly. "A channel wave transmission study in the Newcastle Coal Measures, Australia." Geoexploration 23, no. 3 (September 1985): 395–413. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0016-7142(85)90005-5.

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BURN, ANDY. "Seasonal work and welfare in an early industrial town: Newcastle upon Tyne, 1600–1700." Continuity and Change 32, no. 2 (July 11, 2017): 157–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268416017000182.

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AbstractThe port of Newcastle upon Tyne in north-east England was transformed in the seventeenth century by the rapid expansion of its coal trade, which demanded an influx of industrial transport workers known as ‘keelmen’. This article assesses wages, perks and the seasonal distribution of income for this growing group of workers, estimating that their real income rose until about 1680, before tailing off again. They were comparatively well paid, but their work was inconsistent and seasonal. The number of days' work available was crucial to welfare in Newcastle, as were a series of formal and informal measures intended to relieve winter poverty and maintain a year-round workforce. Combining quantitative and qualitative evidence, this article offers a north-eastern industrial perspective on English living standards debates that still tend to be dominated by south-eastern building and agricultural labourers.
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Varming, Carsten. "Port of Newcastle, Australia: innovation at one of the world's largest coal-export terminals." Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering 166, no. 4 (November 2013): 178–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1680/cien.12.00037.

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Alif, Sheikh M., Malcolm R. Sim, Clarence Ho, and Deborah C. Glass. "Cancer and mortality in coal mine workers: a systematic review and meta-analysis." Occupational and Environmental Medicine 79, no. 5 (November 15, 2021): 347–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/oemed-2021-107498.

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Coal mine workers are exposed to a number of workplace hazards which may increase the risk of cancer and mortality. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate cancer and mortality in coal mine workers We searched in Ovid Medline, PubMed, Embase and Web of Science databases using keywords and text words related to coal mines, cancer and mortality and identified 36 full-text articles using predefined inclusion criteria. Each study’s quality was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. We performed random-effect meta-analyses including 21 of the identified articles evaluating cancer and/or mortality of coal mine workers. The meta-analysis showed an increased risk of all-cause mortality (SMR 1.14, 95% CI 1.00 to 1.30) and mortality from non-malignant respiratory disease (NMRD) (3.59, 95% CI 3.00 to 4.30) in cohorts with coal workers’ pneumoconiosis (CWP). We found a somewhat increased risk of stomach cancer (1.11, 95% CI 0.97 to 1.35) and of mortality from NMRD (1.26, 95% CI 0.99 to 1.61) in the cohorts of coal miners with unknown CWP status. The meta-analysis also showed a decreased risk of prostate cancer and cardiovascular and cerebrovascular mortality among coal miners. This may be a result of the healthy worker effect and possible lower smoking rates, and perhaps also reflect the physically active nature of many jobs in coal mines. The meta-analysis for lung cancer did not show increased risk in coal miners with CWP (1.49, 95% CI 0.70 to 3.18) or for coal miners of unknown CWP status (1.03, 95% CI 0.91 to 1.18). Lower smoking rates in coal mine workers could explain why case–control studies where smoking was controlled for showed higher risks for lung cancer than were seen in cohort studies. Coal mine workers are at increased risk of mortality from NMRD but decreased risk of prostate cancer and cardiovascular and cerebrovascular mortality. Studies of coal mine workers need long-term follow-up to identify increased mortality and cancer incidence.
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Liu, Xiaohui, Amy Salter, Paul Thomas, James Leigh, and He Wang. "Exhaled Nitric Oxide Levels and Lung Function Changes of Underground Coal Miners in Newcastle, Australia." Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A 73, no. 5-6 (February 19, 2010): 437–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15287390903486592.

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Allason-Jones, L., and J. M. Jones. "Identification of ‘jet’ artefacts by reflected light microscopy." European Journal of Archaeology 4, no. 2 (2001): 233–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/eja.2001.4.2.233.

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From the late second century AD to the end of the fourth century AD, black, shiny materials were popular in Britain and the Rhineland for the production of jewellery. In the past, in the absence of accurate, detailed analysis, all these products, irrespective of composition, have invariably been described as being made of ‘jet’. A project at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, has used the non-destructive technique of reflected light microscopy to identify the various black materials used by the Roman craftsmen. Long used for petrographic studies of coals and fossil fuels, this technique has proved very suitable for the analysis of small artefacts. The project initially focused on black objects from the area of Hadrian's Wall but was extended to look at objects from Rhineland sites as well as finds from other parts of Britain and the Continent. The project has revealed that a wide range of ‘jets’ and shales and varieties of coal from a diversity of geographical sources were used, and that the Rhineland objects were not carved from Whitby jet but from an unidentified source.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Newcastle Coal"

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Skinner, William. "Optimering van Iscor Newcastle kooks-steenkool mengsel." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/51865.

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Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2000.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: It was found that the hot metal cost of ISCOR Newcastle's single blast furnace can significantly be reduced by the correct use of an integrated model to predict reductant cost based mainly on coal blend. The model uses coal ash chemistry, fluiidity, vitrinite rank and volatile matter to predict coke strength after reaction (CSR), coke ash and coking yield. CSR is used to predict maximum allowable coke nut- and pea consumption in the furnace as well as hot blast temperature. Pitch injection levels are predicted using CSR and blast furnace production rates. Coke ash, pitch injection and hot blast temperature is used to predict the coke rate. The above is used with imported Chinese coke cost to accurately predict reductant cost. It was found that the current optimum blends should include Australian en Nieu Zeeland coals because of price and quality conciderations. Because of its low cost of production and low quality the optimum percentage of Grootegeluk in the blend is determined largely by its transfer price.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die vloeiyster koste van ISCOR Newcastle se enigste hoogoond kan drasties verlaag word deur die korrekte gebruik van 'n geïntegreerde model wat reduktant koste voorspel op grond van steenkoolmengsel. Die model gebruik die chemiese samestelling van steenkool-as, fluiiditeit, vitriniet rang en vlugstof om kooks warmsterkte (SNR), kooks-as en verkooksingsopbrengs te voorspel. SNR is gebruik om die maksimum kooksneute- en -erteverbruik in die hoogoond sowel as blaastemperatuur te voorspel. Pikinspuiting is bereken met SNR en hoogoond produksietempo's. Pikinspuiting en blaastemperatuur word saam met kooks-as gebruik om kookskoers te voorspel. Bogenoemde is saam met die koste van ingevoerde Chinese kooks gebruik om reduktant koste akkuraat te voorspel. Daar was bevind dat die huidige optimum mengsels Australiese en Nieu Zeelandse steenkool moet bevat as gevolg van huidige prys- en kwaliteitsoorwegings. As gevolg van sy lae produksiekoste en lae kwaliteit word die optimum hoeveelheid Grootegeluk bepaal deur sy oordragprys.
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Morokane, Tebogo Molefe Shadrack. "The impact of gold and coal mine residue on water resources in the Roodepoort and Newcastle areas." Diss., University of Pretoria, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2263/30818.

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Large quantities of tailings are produced during gold and coal mining activities. These tailings consist of ash dumps, waste rock dumps, in-pit deposits and any other heap, pile or accumulation of residue in the tailings or slimes dams. It has been reported that these tailings can have a significant impact on water quality in the vicinity of gold and coal residues in South Africa. Water quality deterioration in the vicinity of gold and coal mines in the Johannesburg and other areas has been reported. However, little information is available on the potential impact of residues on water quality near Roodepoort and Newcastle where gold and coal, respectively, are mined. The objective of this investigation was therefore to determine the potential impact of gold and coal mine residues on the environment in the vicinity of Roodepoort and Newcastle. Secondary objectives were to identify the metal constituents of gold and coal mine residues, to evaluate and define the current knowledge with regard to the short-term water quality impact of gold and coal residues in terms of concentration of metals leaching from the residues, to assess the potential impact of gold and coal tailings on the water environment within the study areas and to suggest methods to prevent pollution from taking place. Acid Base Accounting (ABA), Toxicity Characteristics Leaching (TCLP), Acid Rain Leaching Procedure (ARLP) and Inductively Plasma Coupled – Mass Spectrometry (IPC-MS) were used as tools to determine the potential impact of gold and coal tailings on the environment. Acid Base Accounting comprises two components that show the potential of the mine residue to produce acid mine drainage, that is, the total sulphur and the net neutralisation potential (NNP). It has been reported that any pyrite mine residue containing more than 0.5% total sulphur may generate acid mine drainage. Mine residues with a net neutralisation potential of less than zero ppt CaCO3 produce acid drainage. The acid base accounting results show that the gold and coal mine residues contain sulphur which has the potential to produce acid mine drainage. Lithium (Li), sodium (Na) magnesium (Mg), aluminium (Al), potassium (K), calcium (Ca), iron (Fe), manganese (Mn) and nickel (Ni) were identified to be present in the gold mine residue. The concentrations of some of the metals that leached from the gold residue according to the TCLP tests were as follows: Al (22 mg/L); Ca (242 mg/L); Fe (29 mg/L); Mn (88 mg/L) and Ni (87 mg/L). The metals that leached from the gold residue according to the ARLP results were as follows: Na (43 mg/L); Al (169 mg/L); Ca (246 mg/L); Fe (771 mg/L); Mn (16 mg/L) and Ni (11 mg/L). Higher concentrations of metals generally leached from the gold residue with the ARLP test than with the TCLP test. The sulphate concentration up-stream of the gold residue was determined at 225 mg/L. This concentration increased to 3 490 mg/L at the decanting point and to 11 577 mg/L downstream of the decanting point. The surface and possibly groundwater are therefore polluted with sulphates. Lithium (Li), sodium (Na), magnesium (Mg), aluminium (Al), potassium (K), calcium (Ca), iron (Fe), manganese (Mn) and nickel (Ni) were identified to be present in the coal mine residue. The concentrations of some of the metals that leached from the coal residue according to the TCLP tests were as follows: Al (3 mg/L); Ca (56 mg/L); Fe (0.21 mg/L); Mn (1 mg/L) and Ni (0.082 mg/L). The metals that leached from the coal residue according to the ARLP test results were as follows: Na (3 mg/L); Al (15 mg/L); Ca (136 mg/L); Fe (0.91 mg/L); Mn (1 mg/L) and Ni (0.07 mg/L). Higher concentrations of metals generally leached from the coal residue with ARLP test than with the TCLP test. The sulphate concentration up-stream of the coal residue was determined at 26 mg/L. This concentration increased to 3 615 mg/L at the decanting point and to 6 509 mg/L downstream of the decanting point. The surface and possibly groundwater are therefore polluted with sulphate. The upstream Na (26 mg/L), Ca (41 mg/L), Fe (0,02 mg/L), Mn (3 mg/L) and Ni (0.065 mg/L) concentrations were low in the case of the gold residues. These concentrations at the decanting point were: Na (289 mg/L); Ca (266 mg/L); Fe (0.2 mg/L); Mn (0.01 mg/L) and Ni (2 mg/L). Fifty metres downstream these concentrations were: Na (140 mg/L); Ca (389 mg/L); Fe (722 mg/L); Mn (395 mg/L) and Ni (15 mg/L). There was a significant increase in the metal concentration from up-stream of the gold residue, to the decanting point and further downstream of the gold residue. The surface and possibly ground water are therefore polluted by the metals leaching from the gold residue. The upstream Na (5 mg/L), Ca (8 mg/L), Fe (0,12 mg/L), Mn (0.015 mg/L) and Ni (0.05 mg/L) concentrations were low in the case of the coal residues. These concentrations at the decanting point were: Na (189 mg/L); Ca (337 mg/L); Fe (68 mg/L); Mn (13 mg/L) and Ni (0.06 mg/L). Fifty metres downstream these concentrations were: Na (65 mg/L); Ca (129 mg/L); Fe (0.48 mg/L); Mn (5 mg/L) and Ni (0.06 mg/L). There was a significant increase in the metal concentration from up-stream of the coal residue, to the decanting point and further downstream of the coal residue. The surface and possibly ground water are therefore polluted by the metals leaching from the coal residue. The gold and coal mine residues are polluting the surface and possibly ground water. Therefore, in order to ameliorate the current status within the Roodepoort and Newcastle catchments, mitigation and management measures such as that the residues should be covered and capped with soil material that would prevent infiltration of the oxygen and rain water into the soil, are recommended. A more comprehensive water quality analysis of the surroundings of the residues is also suggested to be able to better quantify the extent of the problem. Copyright
Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2011.
Chemical Engineering
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Jasonsmith, Julia F. "Origins of salinity and salinisation processes in the Wybong Creek catchment, New South Wales, Australia." Phd thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/49429.

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The Wybong Creek catchment is located in the upper Hunter Valley of New South Wales, Australia, and contains award winning beef and wine producing operations. Solute concentrations in Wybong Creek are often too high for irrigation use, however, with previous research showing that the saline and Na-Cl dominated water discharged from Wybong Creek decreases water quality in both the Goulburn and Hunter Rivers into which it flows. This study therefore aimed at identifying the source of solutes to the Wybong Creek catchment and the processes which cause salinisation of surface water, soil (regolith) and groundwater. Surface water was sampled at ten sites along Wybong Creek over three years, while groundwater was sampled from most of the bores and piezometers occurring in the Wybong Creek valley. Surface and groundwater in the upper catchment were dominated by Na-Mg-HCO3. Ratios of 87Sr/86Sr and cation/HCO3 indicated these facies were due to silicate weathering of the Liverpool Ranges, with localised groundwater bodies recharging in the Liverpool Ranges and discharging in the upper Wybong Creek valley. Wybong Creek became saline, and Na-Mg-Cl dominated in the mid-catchment area, with salinity doubling between the 55 and 60 km sample sites on some dates. Changes in surface water chemistry occurred independently of surface water input from tributaries, with abrupt salinity increases within a pool between these sites attributed to groundwater input via fractures beneath the Creek. One of two salt scalds in the Wybong Creek catchment also occurs adjacent to this stretch of river. A field site was established at the mid-catchment locality of Manobalai, therefore, in order to constrain the relationship between surface water, regolith and groundwater salinity. Ten piezometers were established at Manobalai, including three piezometer nests. Most regolith at Manobalai was found to be non-saline, including that within the salt scald, with the most saline and Na-Cl dominated regolith samples occurring in some of the most moist and coarse sandy/gravel layers. Groundwater sampled from piezometers installed in the holes drilled for regolith samples had salinities up to 20 times higher than the regolith on a per weight basis, and were similarly dominated by Na-Cl. A lack of carbonate and sulfate minerals within the soils and no indication of Ca-Mg/HCO3- SO4 dominated facies within alluvial soil solutions indicated groundwater did not evolve from rainwater to Na-Cl dominated facies while infiltrating the regolith. Groundwater samples from Manobalai were instead found to be amongst the most fresh and the most saline within the Wybong Creek catchment, and changed salinity abruptly down-gradient along a transect. Groundwater flow occurred through fractures in the Narrabeen Group sandstones and conglomerates, with vertical groundwater flow via fractures causing abrupt changes in salinity. Ratios of Na/Cl, Cl/Br and 87Sr/86Sr indicated saline groundwater at Manobalai and in the lower catchment was influenced by a marine endmember and halite dissolution. A poor relationship between salinity and d18O indicated this marine endmember was not evapoconcentrated rainwater. The occurrence of saline surface and groundwater in the Wybong Creek catchment was instead attributed to discharge from the regional groundwater system occurring in the Wittingham Coal Measures, with the abrupt increases in salinity at Manobalai indicating mixing between local, intermediate and/or regional groundwater systems. Salinity is likely to function similarly to this in the rest of the Hunter Valley also. The occurrence of salinity in both the Hunter River and Wybong Creek catchments is a naturally occurring phenomenon with salinity mitigation difficult due to the regional extent of the saline groundwater systems. Living with salt strategies are therefore recommended, such as limiting irrigation using both saline and fresh water and continuing with restrictions on saline discharge from coal mines.
This work was supported by ARC Linkage grant number LP05060743. Scholarship funding was provided by The Australian National University Faculty of Science and Research School of Earth Sciences, with project funding and support also provided by Hunter Central Rivers Catchment Management Authority and the New South Wales Office of Water.
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Dunlop, Robyn. "‘Psychiatry at the Coal Face’: patients and the development of community mental health services in New South Wales, Australia, 1960–1980." Thesis, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1432897.

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Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
The second half of the twentieth century was a period of major reform in the administration of mental health in Western democracies, when the orientation of state mental health services turned from legally certified to voluntary patients and psychiatric treatment moved from hospital to community settings. This thesis tells the story of reform of the administration of mental health during the development of community mental health services from 1960 to 1980. It positions the changing role of the patient as crucial to these reforms. I argue that Newcastle and the surrounding Hunter Valley region in New South Wales, Australia, was a site of particular importance in genealogies of patients. Newcastle, an industrial, regional city, was undergoing shifts representative of wider demographic and economic trends in the West during this period, and was the location for experimentation in the administration of mental health. These developments were linked to the emergence of patient rights and obligations, and developments influenced psychiatry and medical education. While the changing authority of patients in the administration of mental health has received little scholarly attention, in this study I argue that it has a central place in mental health histories. I demonstrate this by reconstructing the rollout of voluntary patient and community mental health services for implied patients in New South Wales in 1960-1980, with particular reference to Newcastle. I read source material against the grain to bring social and cultural perspectives to developments that shaped, and were negotiated by, patients. I draw on material from academic, health administration and community sectors, held in the David Maddison Collection in the University of Newcastle Archives, New South Wales, Australia; oral history interviews with former mental health staff and family members of patients; government reports; and interviews and published material by patients available in the public domain. In doing so I expose the lineage of twenty-first century mental health patient roles. I argue that changes in patients and services reflected an expansion in what mental health services were seen to address, and that approaches trialled in the administration of mental health have had a powerful influence on public health policy over time.
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Books on the topic "Newcastle Coal"

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Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin" (21st 1987). Twenty First Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin": 10th-12th April, 1987, Newcastle, N.S.W., Australia. [Newcastle]: Dept. of Geology, University of Newcastle, N.S.W., 1987.

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Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin" (28th 1994). Twenty Eighth Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin": 15th to 17th April, 1994, Newcastle NSW, Australia. Newcastle, NSW: Dept. of Geology, University of Newcastle, 1994.

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Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin" (34th 2000). Proceedings of the Thirty Fourth Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the study of the Sydney Basin: July 6, 2000, Newcastle NSW 2308 Australia. Callaghan, N.S.W: University of Newcastle, Discipline of Geology, 2002.

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Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin" (24th 1990). Twenty Fourth Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin": 23rd to 25th March, 1990, Newcastle N.S.W., Australia. [Newcastle, N.S.W.]: Dept. of Geology, University of Newcastle, N.S.W., 1990.

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Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin" (32nd 1998). Proceedings of the Thirty Second Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin": April 3-5, 1998, Newcastle NSW 2308, Australia. [Newcastle, N.S.W.]: Dept. of Geology, The University of Newcastle, 1998.

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Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin" (33rd 1999). Proceedings of the Thirty Third Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin": July 30-August 1, 1999, Newcastle NSW 2308 Australia. Callaghan, N.S.W: University of Newcastle, Dept. of Geology, 1999.

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Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin" (30th 1996). Proceedings of the thirtieth Newcastle Symposium on "Advances in the Study of the Sydney Basin", Diessel symposium, March 29-31, 1996, Newcastle, NSW 2308, Australia. [Newcastle, N.S.W.]: Dept. of Geology, University of Newcastle, 1996.

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Alastair, Johnson, ed. The diary of Thomas Giordani Wright, Newcastle doctor, 1826-1829. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press, 2001.

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Research, IEA Coal, ed. 1991 International Conference on Coal Science proceedings: Proceedings of the International Conference on Coal Science, 16-20 September 1991, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, United Kingdom. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, 1991.

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Hopkins, Andrew. Lessons from Gretley: Mindful leadership and the law. Sydney: CCH Australia, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Newcastle Coal"

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Francis, A. W., and J. Alcorta. "Coals to Newcastle — Cryogenics in Antarctica." In Advances in Cryogenic Engineering, 1031–35. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-9047-4_130.

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Jackson, Paul. "Taking Coals to Newcastle: The Movement of Clothing to Hong Kong and the Far East." In Logistics And Retail Management insights Into Current Practice And Trends From Leading Experts, 66–87. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429271144-4.

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Larson, Peter L. "Introduction." In Rethinking the Great Transition, 1–3. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192849878.003.0001.

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Durham’s wealth came from more than coal. Yeomen were emerging in Durham shortly after the Black Death. Rather than being poor and backward, parts of rural Durham developed precociously, to be overtaken only centuries later. Not all shared in the growing prosperity, however, due to local conditions and institutions that shaped access to land. Durham’s agriculture supported the rapid expansion of the coal trade out of Newcastle, and was reflected in increasing quantities of imported and locally produced goods. The vitality of the north-eastern economy helps to explain how England overtook the Low Countries to be the dominant economy in Europe in the seventeenth century.
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Brooks, Elizabeth, and Mel Steer. "The North East of England: place, economy and people." In Hope Under Neoliberal Austerity, 19–34. Policy Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447356820.003.0002.

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This chapter introduces the North East of England: its people, industries, economy, how it is governed, how it compares to other regions and its future outlook. The idea of the North East is traced to its origins, uncovering the various layers of sub and supra regional devolution that frame its governance today. A thumbnail portrait of the North East region’s geography, industry, heritage and culture outlines its economic trajectory from ‘coal to call centres and ships to microchips’, and highlights the often forgotten two thirds of the region that are rural, rich in environmental assets and growing in population. While emphasising the challenges and vulnerabilities of the region, the account also points to its distinct identity and cultural renaissance through flagship projects in places including Newcastle upon Tyne, Durham, Sunderland, and Middlesbrough. The chapter ends with a consideration of the region’s prospects during Covid-19 and post-Brexit.
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Larson, Peter L. "Development and Capitalism." In Rethinking the Great Transition, 4–25. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192849878.003.0002.

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Reviews the literature and major questions on the end of serfdom and rural economic development in pre-modern England. The period from the Black Death to the later seventeenth century was one of major transitions in Europe. The Netherlands, then England and Britain, overtook Spanish and Italian states for economic dominance in Europe, leading to the Great Divergence as Europe overtook Asia. In England, these centuries saw the end of serfdom and open field, and communal agriculture, with a new emphasis on individual and agrarian capitalism. The northeast was prospering, with capitalist farmers supplying the region and the expanding coal trade in Newcastle, although not at the scale of London with its exports of the new draperies and its growing population leading to agrarian development in southern England. This demonstrates an alternative to the traditional models of agrarian and economic development and indicates the importance of regional growth in supporting the national economy.
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"COALS TO NEWCASTLE." In Black Wind, White Snow, 54–74. Yale University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2t5xgcn.10.

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Moyn, Samuel. "Coals to Newcastle." In Pierre Rosanvallon's Political Thought, 217–28. Bielefeld University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2f9xsm3.15.

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"4. Coals to Newcastle." In Black Wind, White Snow, 54–74. Yale University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/9780300223941-007.

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"4 Coals to Newcastle." In Black Wind, White Snow, 54–74. Yale University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/9780300269253-008.

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"12. Coals to Newcastle." In Pierre Rosanvallon's Political Thought, 217–28. Bielefeld University Press, transcript, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839446522-013.

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Conference papers on the topic "Newcastle Coal"

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"Improved stockyard management strategies for coal export terminals at Newcastle." In 19th International Congress on Modelling and Simulation. Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand (MSSANZ), Inc., 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.36334/modsim.2011.aa.boland.

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Fowler, M. J., M. E. Kobler, and F. M. Weir. "DFN Characterization and Block Size Assessment of a Fault Zone at a Long Wall Coal Mine in the Newcastle Coal Field, Australia." In 3rd International Discrete Fracture Network Engineering Conference. ARMA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.56952/arma-dfne-22-0014.

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Abstract:
Abstract This paper presents the development and results of Discrete Fracture Network (DFN) modelling of a 100m wide fault zone for a proposed underground long wall panel at a coal mine in the Newcastle Coalfield, Australia. The purpose of the DFN modelling was to estimate the risk of unstable blocks in a narrow unsupported opening between the cutting face and a support shield. Both regional and local data was used to develop a detailed fault characterization model upon which to base the DFN development. This was particularly important for educating faults lengths. The DFN modelling established a set of realizations that were used to statistically assess kinematic stability of blocks exposed in the roof and walls of the unsupported opening. A second more conservative assessment of blocks was undertaken by manual inspection as a simple attempt to account for blocks with small rock bridges.
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Niu, Jianxin, Chin Hiang Chua, and Brett Hawkins. "Case Studies of Ground Improvement Techniques Used on a Coal Export Terminal Development in Newcastle, Australia." In International Symposium on Ground Improvement Technologies and Case Histories. Singapore: Research Publishing Services, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3850/gi030.

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