The Mine Safety And Health Administration?s Regulations And Activities Pertaining To Asbestiform Minerals

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Aurel Goodwin
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
5
File Size:
541 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

Remarks of Aurel Goodwin, Chief, Division of Health, Metal and Nonmetal Mine Safety and Health, Mine Safety and fEealth Administration, U. S. Department of Labor, before the Society of Mining Engineers of the AIME, Littleton, Colorado, on October 18, 1979. I appreciate this opportunity to speak before the Society of Mining Engineers of the AIME. The topic of my presentation is the Mine Safety and Health Administrations's (MSHA) concern and obligations with regard to asbestiform minerals. Asbestiform minerals - the magical group of hydrated, silicate minerals which possess a fiber like structure capable of being woven, like and into cloth. Their unique combination of properties, such as resistance to heat and chemical attack, high tensile strength, and flexibility was recognized centuries before Christ. Pausanias, the early Greek geographer, speaks of golden lamps made about 430 B.C. with incombustible wicks of "Carpathian flax." The Romans used asbestos as cremation clothes to conserve the ashes of deceased persons of rank. Charlemagne had an asbestos table cloth that he used to pass through fire to clean (1). Early recognition of the health hazards associated with exposure to asbestos was documented in the first century by Pliny the Elder, a Roman naturalist, and Strabo, a Greek geographer. Bath wrote of slaves with sickness of the lungs, whose occupation was that of weaving asbestos into cloth. This concern for the health of asbestos workers disappeared over the ages.
Citation

APA: Aurel Goodwin  (1979)  The Mine Safety And Health Administration?s Regulations And Activities Pertaining To Asbestiform Minerals

MLA: Aurel Goodwin The Mine Safety And Health Administration?s Regulations And Activities Pertaining To Asbestiform Minerals. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1979.

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