IC 7246 Stenches for Emergency Warnings in Metal Mines

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 15
- File Size:
- 43572 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jul 1, 1943
Abstract
Fires in metal mines have resulted in some of the worst disasters in
American mining history insofar as loss of life is concerned. One fire caused
the death of 163 miners and individual less spectacular fires have cost the
lives of scores of workers. Metal mines are often very deep, and the men
working on numerous levels far removed from direct communication with the
surface. In many instances they cannot be warned quickly of an emergency
or a mine fire by telephone or other usual method of communication, or by
messenger, flashing lights, gongs, sirens, or whistles. Telephones are not
paricularly effective as a means of warning unless placed at all strategic
points and with attendants always on duty; though telephones well placed have
a definite value in any well-pla.mied emergency procedure in mines of all
kinds. Messengers are slow and men working in remote parts of a mine
would not receive a warning quickly enough. Most metal mines are not electrically
lighted, except at or adjacent to shaft stations and in principal haulageways,
and this limits the effectiveness of flashing lights. Electric gongs and
sirens or whistles have been tried as warning signals, but the sound is quickly
deadened and does not travel upward into the stopes, especially those of an
extensive volume. Shutting off the compressed air is by no means satisfactory
as a warning, as not infrequently it is stopped accidently, so that it loses its
value as an alarm. The introduction of water into compressed air lines is
undesirable as a fire warning and necessitates considerable care, especially
in deep mines; pressure-reducing valves must be provided to reduce pressure
that otherwise would break connections or split the pipe.
A quick, effective method of warning miners underground of the existence
of an emergency requiring them to leave the mine immediately, such
as a fire on the surface or underground, is provided by the introduction of
stenches in the compressed-air lines. This method of warning is by no means
experimental, inasmuch as it has been used successfully for many years in
Citation
APA:
(1943) IC 7246 Stenches for Emergency Warnings in Metal MinesMLA: IC 7246 Stenches for Emergency Warnings in Metal Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1943.