Bulletin 26 Notes on Explosive mine gases and dusts

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 65
- File Size:
- 3800 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1911
Abstract
The studies herein reported were begun as a part of researches
undertaken by the United States Geologü;al Survey looking to the
more effcient utilization of the coal in the United States through the
reduction of waste in its extnidion, and were continued as part of
further researches having regard to the conservation of the fuel
resources of this country and to the lessening of injuries and fatalities
in coal mining.
Among other phases of the general problem to be studied were the
origin of the gas whidi escapes into coal mines, its modes of occurrence
in the coal and rock strata, and the conditions governing its
outflow into the mines. The subject of relative danger from destructive
explosions due to gas and coal dust in different mines belonging
to different coal fields was to be one of the principal lines of investigation.
But this work was barely under way when the series of unusually
disastrous explosions in the Naomi, .Monongah, and Darr mines of
Pennsylvania and West Virginia, in December, 1907, afforded an
exceptional occasion to observe the behavior of explosions on a large
scale. Because of the opportunities for study afforded by these terrific
explosions, the inquiry originally planned was d ¡verted to the
more specific investigation of the conditions in tl10SC mines, and the
examinations have been directed toward finding those qualities of
gas and dust which were concerned in these explosions. The following
discussion, therefore, consists essentially of a report on that
subject; but it is far from being exhaustive, and is to be regarded
as a preliminary outline of investigations which are still in progress. The first of the three mine explosions mentioned occurred in the
Naomi mine of the United Coal Company, near Bellevernon, Pa., on
Sunday, December 1, at 7.40 p. m. All the men who were within
the mine at the time, fortunately only 34, were killed.
Less than a week later there occurred in mines Nos. fì and 8 of the
Fairmont Coal Company at Monongah, W. Va., the most disastrous
mine explosion yet recorded in the annals of American mining. The
mines were comparatively new and well laid out. Mine No.8 had
been in operation only about two years and was the pride of the
Fairmont Coal Company. Mine No.6 was first opened ahout four
years earlier. In order to make it possible, in case of emergency,
for either mine to be ventilated by the ventilating system of the
other, the two sets of workings were connected underground. The
F face heading of mine K o. 6 led direetly into No.2 north heading of
No.8 mine. On Friday, Dcccmber 6, at about 10.30 in the morning,
an explosion of unusual violcnce swept completely through both
mines, pursuing its course throughout the numerous ramifications
and bursting out of the two pit mouths, located It miles apart, nearly
simultaneously. The slope of mine No.6 was only slightly damaged,
but at the mouth of No.8 the destruction was very great. The fan
was wrecked, the engine house was demolished, and mine timbers
were blown across Monongahela River: As nearly as can be determined,
361 men were killed in the two mines by the explosion.
.While the inspection of the Monongah mines was still in progress,
on Thursday morning, December 19, at about 11.20, a similar explosion
wrecked the Darr mine of the Pittsburgh Coal Company ut
Jacobs Creek, Pu.; 238 men lost their lives in this explosion, which
in number of casualties is second only to the :Monongah disustcr in
the history of American mining. Of ull thc men in the mine at the
, time of the explosion, only one mun, who happened to be within 100
feet of the ~iUrface on an old manway in a wet, unexploded portion of
the mine, succeeded in escaping alive.
The underground investigation of these mines was made in cooperation
with Clarence Hall and ""Valter O. Snelling, of the United
States Geological Survey, and James ""V. Paul, now of the Survey
but at that time chief of the department of mines for vVest Virginia,
to all of whom the author is greatly indebted for valuable assistance,
suggestions, and advice. Mr. Paul will rcport on the nature of these
explosions, the precipitating causes, their destructiveness, and the
general cüliditions in these mines following the disasters. The present
report is confined essentially to the laboratory examination of some
of the explosive materials collected from these mines directly ufter
the explosions.
Citation
APA:
(1911) Bulletin 26 Notes on Explosive mine gases and dustsMLA: Bulletin 26 Notes on Explosive mine gases and dusts. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1911.