RI 4109 Flood Prevention Project at Penna. Anthracite Mines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
S. H. Ash W. E. Caspar James Westfield W. L. Eaton W. M. Rohmiser E. J. Podobrski L. H. Johnson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
96
File Size:
9641 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 1947

Abstract

A flood in mine workings is a crisis even if no lives are lost, and when the crisis is past and the excitement wanes there is usually a rapid return to unwarranted complacency in those regions where floods occur, even though the danger of imminent recurrence is known. Experience in flood control, regardless of its nature, has taught that in a flood the work does not cease when the emergency passes; rather, it increases as the water recedes. To do nothing, when it is known that a hazard exists, is inexcusable for those that should do something. To prevent floods in mines, data should be collected and something constructive done with those data, not alone for present conditions but for the future.
Citation

APA: S. H. Ash W. E. Caspar James Westfield W. L. Eaton W. M. Rohmiser E. J. Podobrski L. H. Johnson  (1947)  RI 4109 Flood Prevention Project at Penna. Anthracite Mines

MLA: S. H. Ash W. E. Caspar James Westfield W. L. Eaton W. M. Rohmiser E. J. Podobrski L. H. Johnson RI 4109 Flood Prevention Project at Penna. Anthracite Mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1947.

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