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RI 2248 A Safety Cut-Out For Trolley Wires At Loading Chutes
By 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 Counties
By 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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Coal dust and methane
In 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 Workers
By 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 4909 Guymard lead-zinc deposit, Orange County, N.Y. (77fbd855-323a-4ac1-9ac4-b7e1e30782d4)
By G. L. Neumann
"INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARYThe Guymard mine in Orange County, N. Y., is reported to have been discovered in 1862 and mined until 1876, producing 10,000 tons of lead and zinc ore. 2/The property was exa
Aug 1, 1952
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IC 7113 Methods Of Sampling And Analyzing Coal-Mine Dusts For Incombustible Content ? Introduction
By C. W. Owings
Recent recommendations of the Bureau of Mines regarding, rock dusting to prevent dust explosions in coal mines have been issued as Mine Safety Board Decision 32 and printed as Information Circular 710
Jan 1, 1940
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IC 7138 How Mine Workers Can Help to Prevent Mine Explosions
By 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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Investigation Of Electromagnetic Emissions In A Deep Underground Mine
By Steven J. Knoll, Theodore J. Williams, Douglas F. Scott
Highly stressed rock in stopes continues to be a primary safety risk for miners in underground mines because it can result in failures of ground that lead to both injuries and death. Spokane Research
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An Evaluation Of Methods For Controlling Silica Dust Exposures On Roof Bolters
By J. A. Organiscak
This paper examines methods for limiting occupational silica exposures for roof bolting personnel in underground coal mining. A canopy air curtain and an air tube were evaluated as means to provide f
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RI 8822 Vanadium-Uranium Extraction From Wyoming Vanadiferous Silicates
By M. Hayashi
The Bureau of Mines conducted laboratory studies on low-grade vanadiferous silicates from the Pumpkin Buttes and Nine Mile Lake deposits of Wyoming to examine techniques for extracting vanadium and ur
Jan 1, 1985
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Trends in Electrical Injury in the U.S., 1992?2002
By James C. Cawley
This paper updates an earlier report by the authors that studied electrical injuries from 1992 to 1998. The previous information is expanded and supplemented with fatal and nonfatal injury rates and t
Jan 1, 2008
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A Process To Make High-BTU Gas From Coal
By Albert J. Forney
A process for the manufacture of high-Btu gas from coal has been developed by the Bureau of Mines. The process consists of fluid-bed gasification of the coal, followed by the gas treatment steps of ga
Jan 1, 1970
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RI 7266 Dispersion-Strengthening In Copper-Alumina And Copper-Yttria Alloys
By R. L. Crosby
The Bureau of Mines investigated alloys of copper with 2, 3, and 4 vol pct alumina and with 2 vol pct yttria. Alloys were prepared by a coprecipitation process and were fabricated by pressing and sint
Jan 1, 1969
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RI 3479 Review Of Cutler's Rule Of Well Spacing
By R. V. Higgins, H. C. Miller
"INTRODUCTION The development of methods for determining the total quantity of crude oil that a given pool could be expected to produce in the future and the well-spacing and drilling programs most li
Nov 1, 1939
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Agglomeration Science
By R. Hogg
"Some basic features of the science and technology of particle systems are reviewed in the context of agglomeration processes. Emphasis is placed on the force of interaction among particles and with t
Jan 1, 1989
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Classification-Based Probabilistic Design Of Ground Support
By Radford B. Langston, John A. Marjerison, Graham C. Howell, Hendrik A. D. Kirsten
Probabilistic design is gaining wider acceptance in the rock engineering community since it allows more rigorous determination of risk relating to ground fall or excavation instability. Risk analysis
Jan 5, 2007
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RI 2993 Some Phases of the Relative Responsibility of Management and Workers for Accidents In Mines
By D. Harrington
"Up to the last 10 or 15 years, responsibility for accidents in mines was generally, though not universally, placed upon the person or persons immediately involved. Present-day thought is rapidly veer
Apr 1, 1930
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RI 3738 Modem Beehive Coke-Oven Practice. 1. Preliminary Report
By G. S. Scott, L. D. Schmidt, J. A. KELLEY, E. L. FISH
One of the war problems with which the Bureau of Mines is concerned is to increase production of iron and steel , in which coke is one of the major factors . The output of byproduct coke for use in ir
Dec 1, 1943
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Hydraulic Prestressing Units: An Innovation In Roof Support Technology
By Stephen C. Tadolini, Thomas M. Barczak, Paul McKelvey
A new generation of hydraulic mine support prestressing devices has been developed. These thin-walled steel shells are machine-welded and can be inflated with water or any liquid to provide prestress