Colorado Paper - Note on a Shaft-Fire and its Lesson

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Robert Gilman Brown
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
216 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1897

Abstract

There are few disasters so difficult to deal with as an underground fire. It is inaccessible at best, and generally unapproachable ; and it finds most material in the very places where it can do most harm, namely, in large stopes and in " heavy " ground where timbers are massed, and in shafts and level-stations where there are inevitably strong drafts to make the burning yet more fierce. The fire constituting the subject of this note occurred in the shaft of the Standard mine at Bodie, California, and originated after the departure of the night-force at 3 a.m., being discovered by the men going to work at 6.30. At that time it had gained already considerable headway, and was throwing smoke plentifully from the collar of the shaft. It must be premised, for understanding of the situation, that in this shaft all hoisting is done to the 320-foot level, where the material is dropped by chutes 30 feet. to the tunnel-level, through which it is run to the mill. Hoist and sheaves are all placed
Citation

APA: Robert Gilman Brown  (1897)  Colorado Paper - Note on a Shaft-Fire and its Lesson

MLA: Robert Gilman Brown Colorado Paper - Note on a Shaft-Fire and its Lesson. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1897.

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