a mining engineer dose all the mechines in the mines to get them back up and running
Software used in Mining Engineering and Geology
That, depends entirely on your own opinion. However, as I prefer working with machines, I would choose mechanical engineering.
mechanical engineer; mining engineer
The umbrella answer is that any field of engineering which does not deal with computers or automation will have the least programming. This includes civil and structural engineering (building bridges and other infrastructure) and geotechnical and mining engineering. However, you should expect to use programs as a user in all engineering domains, i.e. Autocad, etc.
Charles E. Locke has written: 'Mining engineering' -- subject(s): Mining engineering, Mining engineers, Mining schools and education
No..Mining Engineering is far diferent from Civil Engineering. Both are fields of engineering but the area is totally different. Mining Engineering relates to thhe mines and the technology required to explore the mines, whereas Civil Engineering relates to creating engineering structures for roads, transportation, bridges, railways, marinas etc.
yes
You choose engineering for a job its how people earn money
a mining engineer dose all the mechines in the mines to get them back up and running
Software used in Mining Engineering and Geology
George Joseph Young has written: 'Elements of mining' -- subject(s): Mining engineering 'The working of unstratified mineral deposits' -- subject(s): Mining engineering, Ore deposits
Bernard Beringer has written: 'Underground practice in mining' -- subject(s): Textbooks, Mining, Mining engineering
singhania university has b.tech course in mining engineering. My question is that is it approved by AICTE & UGC?
engineering so your stronger
I think they get paid a little more than minimum wage Mining engineering in Australia is a lucrative and very highly-paid profession, particularly for those prepared to work in remote mining centres.
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