| exploration |
Fur trappers are thought to have visited Wyoming in the 18th century, but it was not until the early 19th century that proper exploration began. One of the earliest explorers was fur trapper John Colter, who in 1807 encountered towering waterfalls and steaming geezers in the Rocky Mountains area, later to become Yellowstone Park, and named it Colter's Hell in his reports. ...
Ãâó: encyclopedia.farlex.com/Wyoming,+United+States
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| exploration |
Generally, the act of searching for potential subsurface reservoirs of gas or oil. Methods include the use of magnetometers, gravity meters, seismic exploration, surface mapping, and other such methods.
Ãâó: www.bakercommunications.com/whbt/section6a.htm
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| exploration |
covers the exploration or discovery of natural resources, including expenditures and extent of reserves located.
Ãâó: rdsweb2.rdsinc.com/help/bi_ct_expdef.html
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| exploration |
the process of locating and proving that a mineral occurrence is indeed an ore body; that is, determining that it is large enough, contains enough copper to be mined profitably.
Ãâó: pangea.stanford.edu/~kurt/kurt-more-lingo.html
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| exploration |
Wayfinding tasks where there are no targets.
Ãâó: www.movesinstitute.org/Theses/Tokgoz_thesisWeb/Web...
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