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RI 4517 Analytical Distillation Of Crude Oils At High Altitudes By The Bureau Of Mines Routine MethodBy Welton J. Wenger
Apparatus for the analytical distillation of crude oils under an artificial pressure of 760 mm. of mercury has been designed and constructed. This apparatus enables laboratories at high altitudes to m
Jan 1, 1949
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RI 6587 Tin-Lode Investigations, Potato Mountain Area, Seward Peninsula, AlaskaBy Mulligan John J.
The Bureau of Mines investigated lode tin deposits on Potato Mountain, Seward Peninsula, Alaska. Tin was found to occur as cassiterite associated with quartz, tourmaline, pyrite, arsenopyrite, and ear
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 8229 Chlorination of ChalcopyriteBy David H. Yee
Because of environmental concerns, the Bureau of Mines investigated an anhydrous chlorination process for the recovery of copper from chalcopyrite, Pelletized concentrate was reacted continuously with
Jan 1, 1977
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Development And Application Of Reservoir Models For The Evaluation And Optimization Of Longwall Methane Control SystemsBy S. J. Schatzel, W. P. Diamond, F. Garcia
Methane explosions have historically been one of the major causes of fatalities and injuries in underground coal mining operations. Advanced numerical models and predictive modeling approaches have th
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RI 8147 Steel From Urban WasteBy Willard L. Hunter
A series of steel heats, one low-alloy and nine carbon, was made by the Bureau of Mines in a 1-ton arc furnace from ferrous scrap from incinerated refuse, steel cans, and detinned steel cans, both alo
Jan 1, 1976
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IC 7750 Water Flooding Of Oil Sands In Butler And Greenwood Counties, Kans. ? Introduction And SummaryBy J. P. Powell
Records show that systematic water flooding was begun as early as 1935 in Greenwood County and in 1937 in Butler County. Water flooding on some earlier projects in Greenwood County were described in a
Jan 1, 1956
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RI 7586 Thermal-Chemical Alteration Of Sandstone To Increase PermeabilityBy Larman J. Heath
Liquid incendiaries were burned within the interstices of several different types of sandstone cores to determine the technical feasibility of increasing sandstone permeability by this method. Fuel-ox
Jan 1, 1971
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RI 4805 Production, Consumption, And Use Of Fuels And Electric Energy In The United States In 1929, 1939, And 1947By William H. Lyon
In 1950 the Program Staff of the Department of the Interior undertook an exploratory study in the projection of energy requirements of the nation. This work was reported in Bureau of Mines Information
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 7600 Enthalpies And Entropies Above 298.15° K For Copper Sulfate And Copper OxysulfateBy M. J. Ferrante
Enthalpy and entropy increments above 298.15° K were determined for cop-per sulfate between 298° and 1,000° K and for copper oxysulfate between 2980 and 1,146° K by the method of copper-block drop cal
Jan 1, 1972
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RI 2248 A Safety Cut-Out For Trolley Wires At Loading ChutesBy E. D. Gardner
"Trolley lines used in connection with electric haulage in mines are a source of danger and many lives have been lost by men accidentally coming in contact with the wires. Usually the wires in metal m
May 1, 1921
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Fan Selection For Large-Opening Mines: Vane-Axial Or Propeller Fans – Which To Choose?By R. H. Grau, R. B. Krog
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has investigated the unique ventilation requirements of large-opening mines to help identify and evaluate the effectiveness of various
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RI 4432 Magnetic Surveys Of Certain Magnetite Deposits In New Jersey Part II. Morris, Passaic, Sussex, And Warren CountiesBy J. A. Stampe
In connection with its investigations of strategic minerals in the United States, the Bureau of Mines ran magnetic surveys totaling more than 533,000 linear feet at 30 deposits of magnetite in norther
Jan 1, 1949
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IC 9374 The Prevalence Of Overexertion Injuries In The U.S. Metal-Nonmetal Mining IndustryBy Debra A. Griffith
The U.S. Bureau of Mines currently is researching the relationship between the level of back strength and the probability of low-back injury. This report is a review of the literature and statistics o
Jan 1, 1994
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Coal dust and methaneIn the USA, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) does a lot of work and has provided news of interesting new developments. Marcia L. Harris describes an ?Explosibility Met
Jan 1, 2008
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Tell Me A Story: Using Narrative To Teach Safety To Skilled Blue-Collar WorkersBy Elaine T. Cullen
Miners, like many skilled blue-collar workers, are not traditional learners. They have not generally been successful in classroom-type settings, preferring to learn on the job in a hands-on environme
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RI 6459 Cost Estimates and Optimum Conditions for Continuous-Circuit Leaching of MercuryBy W. A. Stickney, J. W. Town
Studies on continuous - circuit leach - aluminum precipitation and leachelectrodeposition of mercury were made by the Bureau of Mines to determine optimum conditions and cost estimates for recovering
Jan 1, 1964
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IC 9130 Helium Resources Of The United States, 1985By Richard D. Miller
The helium resources base of the United States was estimated by the Bureau of Mines to be 1,070 Bcf as of January 1, 1985. These resources are divided into four categories in decreasing degree of assu
Jan 1, 1987
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IC 7239 Olivine ? IntroductionBy G. Richards Gwinn
The mineral olivine, though known to mineralogists for many years, was of little commercial value in the United States before 1933. It was first described in 1790 by Johann Gottlieb Werner, who named
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 7138 How Mine Workers Can Help to Prevent Mine ExplosionsBy D. Harrington
"Coal—mine explosions are accidents that can and should be prevented. In former years hundreds of lives were lost each year in the United States as a result of such explosions, but after 1932 the nume
Nov 1, 1940
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RI 8874 - Minor-Element Interactions in Copper Matte SmeltingBy Elizabeth A. Johnson
Minor-element behavior and interaction in the copper matte-iron silicate slag system have been studied by the Bureau of Mines. In the present work, the possibility of interactions among the minor elem
Jan 1, 1984