The Preservation of Timber by Chemical Treatment at McIntyre

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
D. E. Keeley
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
7636 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

lntroduction Some years ago it was general practice in Canadian mines to use the best timber available, just as it was cut from the tree. Later, to prevent 'borers' from getting into the wood while stacked in the yard, the bark was peeled off, cleaned up carefully, and burned to eliminate a breeding ground for these and other destructive insects. This practice of good housekeeping also decreased the hazard from fire in scattered bark. A few years after damage by borers had been minimized, it became apparent that increased temperatures in the mines, occasioned by deepening operations, were being accompanied by rapid growth of fungus and by decay in timber underground, greatly shortening its life. In places on upper levels where the air temperature was below 50 deg. F., untreated timber retained a large proportion of its strength for ten or more years. In other places on these levels, however; its life was short and it developed much dry rot and merulius lacrymans. In these latter places and on lower levels in the mine where temperatures ranged from 50 to 60 deg. F., approximately, the wood became infested with extensive growths of this white fungus. This development was accompanied by the production of millions of spores. Spread of infection was due mainly to the transfer of spores from the warm lower levels to the cool upper horizons by upcasting ventilation currents. So serious did this become that about twenty years ago Lake Shore, Hollinger, and McIntyre Mines decided to investigate the use of wood preservatives and the plant necessary to treat timber.
Citation

APA: D. E. Keeley  (1949)  The Preservation of Timber by Chemical Treatment at McIntyre

MLA: D. E. Keeley The Preservation of Timber by Chemical Treatment at McIntyre. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1949.

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