IC 7503 Safeguarding Underground Workmen from Noxious Gases Resulting from Blasting in Strip Mines

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 23
- File Size:
- 2678 KB
- Publication Date:
- May 1, 1949
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION The asphyxiation or poisoning of workmen in underground mines by noxious gases from blasting in adjacent strip mines can be prevented.Considerable progress has been made in eliminating or reducing hazards to the health and safety of underground workmen in anthracite mines, but seldom does a year pass without reported cases of underground workmen being poisoned by the fumes from blasts of explosives in strip-mining operations. In the early days of the anthracite industry, the coal near the surface was only partly mined, and many small stumps of pillars and barrier pillars were left standing; these pillars are now being recovered by stripping. It has become necessary to give more consideration to the effects of blasting at strip mines upon the quality of the air in underground mines adjacent to stripping operations.Special precautions are taken by the .personnel of the Jeddo-Highland Coal Co., whose mines are near Jeddo, Luzerne County, and near Centralia in Columbia and Schuylkill Counties in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania, to prevent asphyxiation of workmen by carbon monoxide or other toxic gases resulting from blasting in strip mines. The procedures established by the Jeddo-Highland Coal Co., are given in this circular so that others may benefit thereby and thus avoid hazards to underground workmen where mining is carried on under similar circumstances."
Citation
APA:
(1949) IC 7503 Safeguarding Underground Workmen from Noxious Gases Resulting from Blasting in Strip MinesMLA: IC 7503 Safeguarding Underground Workmen from Noxious Gases Resulting from Blasting in Strip Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.