Arizona Paper - The Composition of the Rock Gas of the Cripple Creek Mining District, Colorado (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
George A. Burrell Alfred W. Gauger
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
23
File Size:
974 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1917

Abstract

The senior author of this paper, while in Colorado on other official business, made a trip to the Cripple Creek gold-mining district to get more data than are at present available regarding the composition of the gas that issues from the rock into the mines of the district. This was done at the suggestion of George S. Rice, Chief Mining Engineer of the Bureau of Mines. There are -many questions of interest and importance in connection with the ventilation of the mines in the Cripple Creek district, such as the menace to life and mining of a suffocating gas entering the mines from the rock, the danger due to powder smoke (from blasting operations), and danger of continued inhalation of rock dust by the miners. This report confines itself to the first problem, the gas from the rock, and principally to one phase of this question, the composition of the gas and its effects on men and lights. A more thorough study of this and other ventilation problems is planned. That the rock gas is a real menace is shown by the fact that miners (variously estimated from 25 to 50 by different persons interviewed) have been killed by it in the 25 years that mining has been vigorously carried on at Cripple Creek. Many men have had narrow escapes from death, some of them having been incapacitated for days. In addition, much loss of time results because at certain periods of the year or on certain days it is impossible to enter some workings. At a few mines, fans force air into the workings, thus supplementing the natural ventilation and much improving conditions, but the improvement is not entirely adequate at all times. Origin of the Gas Lindgren and Ransome1 think that the gas found in the rocks of the Cripple Creek mining district represents the last exhalations of the ex-
Citation

APA: George A. Burrell Alfred W. Gauger  (1917)  Arizona Paper - The Composition of the Rock Gas of the Cripple Creek Mining District, Colorado (with Discussion)

MLA: George A. Burrell Alfred W. Gauger Arizona Paper - The Composition of the Rock Gas of the Cripple Creek Mining District, Colorado (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account