IC 7294 Prospect Trenching With Caterpillar-Mounted Angledozers

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
S. H. Lorain
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
9
File Size:
3155 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1944

Abstract

Mechanized dirt-moving equipment has greatly increased the scope of prospect trenching by lowering the costs and increasing the speed of such work. Where the soil covering was more than 3 or 4 feet deep, operators were quickly discouraged and abandoned surface exploration in favor of shaft sinking, drifting, or diamond drilling; wildcat trenching was seldom undertaken, even where the soil covering was thin. Although power shovels, trench diggers, and draglines are useful under special conditions, caterpillar-mounted angledozers will usually do the same type of work and have a far wider range of adaptability. They are therefore incomparably the most generally useful equipment for the purpose. Since 199 the Bureau of Mines has been engaged in a widespread search for minerals useful to the war program; this work required a great deal of pioneer exploration in areas where known outcrops were marginal or subcommercial by pre-war standards. Engineers in charge of field operations were quick to perceive the applicability of mechanized trenching on a fairly large scale, particularly in the Northwestern States, where completely exposed vein-outcrops are rare. Probably no other organization to date has done a comparable amount of angledozer prospect trenching under such a wide range of conditions. The following comments and accompanying cost tables are based on work performed chiefly in Idaho, under a variety of physical and climatic conditions. The most important applications of the angledozer for such work may be described under three heads:
Citation

APA: S. H. Lorain  (1944)  IC 7294 Prospect Trenching With Caterpillar-Mounted Angledozers

MLA: S. H. Lorain IC 7294 Prospect Trenching With Caterpillar-Mounted Angledozers. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1944.

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