Bulletin 225 Stone Dusting or Rock Dusting to Prevent Coal Dust Explosions

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 61
- File Size:
- 3518 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1924
Abstract
The prevention of coal-mine explosions has been one of the chief
purposes of the Bureau of Mines. In facti the first Federal appropriation
relating to mining methods, in 1908, authorized the investigation
of the causes of mine explosions and the possible methods of
preventing them. When that investigation started the mining industry
had not determined the real causes of a succession of terrible
coal-mine explosions in various countries, culminating in the great
disasters at CoulTièl'es, France, and Monongah, W. Va. Coal dust
as an agent of widespread explosions had been under suspicion, and
watering to allay the dust was recommended by some mining engineers
but the watering of coal-mine dust was adopted in comparatively few
mines of the United States and Great Britain, and had not been introduced
widely in any country except Germany.
Rock dusting, another method of preventing explosions of coal dust,
was early tested with success by the Bureau of Mines in its fist gallery
at Pittsburgh and, beginnig in 1911, at the experimental mine,
Bruceton, Pa. Several of the fist publications i of the bureau suggested
that rock dust be used in gaseous or dusty bituminous mines,
and in 1915 Technical Paper 842 strongly recommended it. Since
that time additional tests in the experimental mine have fully confied
this :ft judgment.
Citation
APA:
(1924) Bulletin 225 Stone Dusting or Rock Dusting to Prevent Coal Dust ExplosionsMLA: Bulletin 225 Stone Dusting or Rock Dusting to Prevent Coal Dust Explosions. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1924.