Pittsburg Paper - Gaseous Decomposition-Products of Black Powder, with Special Reference to the Use of Black Powder in Coal-Mines

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 26
- File Size:
- 928 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1911
Abstract
The experiments herein described were carried on in 1908-9 by- the State Geological Survey of Kansas. Some months before taking up work on black powder the Survey had resumed work on an interrupted investigation of explosions in coalmines, a subject which is engaging the attention of numerous investigators. An unusual number of serious disasters has directed to the subject a study which discloses the disquieting fact that, in the United States, the ratio of lives lost per ton of coal mined has been 011 the increase. Methods of coal-mining have changed to some extent with the great increase of output, attained in comparatively recent years. These changes involve the working of very extensive mines, with increased difficulty of ventilation, increased accumulation of coal-dust, and a very great increase in the amount of explosive used. This last point assumes truly startling proportions when it is carefully observed. In the fields of the Middle West it is not now uncommon for a miner to use six kegs (150 lb.) of black powder in a " pay" of two weeks, while within the memory of men still active, one keg (25 Ib.) would last two men for a " pay." So great has the use of explosives become in some fields that the skilled coal-miner is hard to find, and the coal is not mined, but blasted. A preliminary study of the subject of explosions in coalmines has led to the belief that the use of large quantities of explosives, in some cases by slightly-trained men, had riot been
Citation
APA:
(1911) Pittsburg Paper - Gaseous Decomposition-Products of Black Powder, with Special Reference to the Use of Black Powder in Coal-MinesMLA: Pittsburg Paper - Gaseous Decomposition-Products of Black Powder, with Special Reference to the Use of Black Powder in Coal-Mines. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1911.