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IC 9492 - Equipment Noise And Worker Exposure In The Coal Mining IndustryBy Daniel R. Babich, Jeffrey R. Vipperman, Eric R. Bauer
Prolonged exposure to loud noise can cause permanent damage to the auditory nerve and/or its sensory components. Despite regulations and efforts by government and industry to reduce noise-induced hea
Jan 12, 2006
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IC 6397 Mining Methods Of Ducktown Chemical And Iron Co., Mary Mine, Isabella, Tenn. ? IntroductionBy Vern L. Kegler
This paper is one off a series dealing with mining methods and costs, sponsored and published by the United States bureau of Mines. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The author acknowledges the, constructive and
Jan 1, 1931
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RI 9666 - Applications Of Ground-Based Radar To Mine Slope MonitoringBy Edward L. McHugh, Charles Sabine, Jami Dwyer, David G. Long
Slope failure accidents were responsible for about 12% of U.S. surface mine fatalities between 1995 and 2003. Small surface movements on a mine highwall may be precursors of failure that, if detected,
Jan 4, 2006
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"Advance And Relieve" Mining, A Method To Mitigate The Affects Of High Horizontal Stress On The Mine RoofBy D. R. Dolinar, J. Pablic, D. C. Oyler, T. P. Mucho
At a mine in central PA, high horizontal stresses have caused long running roof falls resulting in hazardous conditions for the miners and the premature abandonment of panels. Because of these conditi
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RI 3359 Permissible Methane Detectors (Supplement To Bulletin 331)By L. C. IlsLey
[The last previous Bureau of Mines publication relative to details of permissible methane detectors (Bulletin 331, published in 1930) describes detectors of four different types, namely flame, combust
Jan 1, 1937
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RI 4384 Investigation Of The Virgilina Copper District Virginia And North CarolinaBy A. W. Newberry
The Virginia copper district is situated in North Carolina and Virginia. It contains many mines and prospects that were active at the turn of the nineteenth century. The Bureau of Mines, as part of t
Jan 1, 1948
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Controlling And Monitoring Diesel Emissions In Underground Mines In The United StatesBy Steven E. Mischler
The exposure of mine workers to diesel particulate matter (DPM) and gases is an issue of great concern to the underground mining community in the United States. Approximately 30,000 underground miner
Jan 1, 2010
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RI 8070 Blasting Tests in a Porphyry Copper Deposit in Preparation for In Situ ExtractionBy Robert C. Steckley
The Bureau of Mines performed a fragmentation experiment in cooperation with Duval Corporation in a porphyry copper-molybdenum deposit near the Sierrita pit south of Tucson, Ariz. This experiment eval
Jan 1, 1975
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Borehole Instrumentation For Emergency Mine Rescue OperationsBy Roger L. King
The Bureau of Mines has developed probes to be used in emergency mine rescue operations by being lowered through a borehole drilled into an underground mine. Various probes can provide two-way voice c
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 2828 The Detection Of Sulphur In Petroleum And Petroleum Distillates - IntroductionBy F. W. Lane
Some months ago the Bureau of Mines began research of a fundamental character on sulphur in petroleum. In the course of this work, the usual qualitative test for sulphur in organic compounds1 was appl
Jan 1, 1927
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RI 3488 Use Of Respiratory Protective Devices Under Abnormal Air PressureBy H. H. Schrenk, F. E. Griffith
"The increase in tunneling operations that requires working under pressures greater than that of ordinary atmosphere has raised the question of the use and possible limitations of respiratory protecti
Jan 1, 1940
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IC 7755 Rock Dusting And Sampling - Including Wet Rock Dusting, At The Bureau Of Mines Experimental Coal Mine ? IntroductionBy Irving Hartmann
Modern mechanized mining with high-speed machines, multiple-entry systems, multiple blasting, high-velocity air currents, and rapid haulage has brought many economic benefits and has on the whole enha
Jan 1, 1956
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Conclusion - Report to the Committee on Mining and Mineral Resources Research 1987"Health standards in the U.S. are among the highest in the world. Achieving these standards have often had an impact on productivity, slowing output, and raising prices to levels that make it difficul
Nov 1, 1988
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RI 2824 Analyses Of Crude Oils From The Seminole District, Oklahoma ? IntroductionBy A. J. Kraemer
The Bureau of Mines for a number of years has been carrying on an investigation of properties of crude petroleum from producing, fields in the United States and the Western Hemisphere, and has publish
Jan 1, 1927
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Review Of The Mineral Industries (ec3edc9a-40e2-4d29-a379-ef542981bb00)By Barry W. Klein
The performance of the U.S. economy in 1977 was similar to that in 1976 which, in turn, had been a considerable improvement over 1974-75. In 1977 real gross national product (GNP) showed a similar, bu
Jan 1, 1980
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Locating Trailing-Cable Faults Using Automated Time-Domain ReflectometryBy George J. Conroy, Angel G. Jordan, Eugene W. Bartel
Time-domain reflectometry has long been an accepted and used method for locating electrical faults in electrical cables. The process has, however, required the use of equipment that is somewhat comple
Jan 1, 1979
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RI 6155 Thermodynamic Properties Of Yttrium Metal And Iron Pentacarbonyl At High TemperaturesBy James R. Welty
Heat content values were experimentally determined for yttrium metal between temperatures of 400° and 1,300° K and for iron pentacarbonyl between 301° and 380° K. The drop technique was used; that is,
Jan 1, 1963
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A Medium Frequency Wireless Communication System For Underground Mines (de44866e-7403-4d05-a8a8-659dd3603d13)By Larry G. Stolarczyk
This report deals with information regarding a new Medium Frequency (MF) Wireless Communication System for underground mines. This new telecommunication system works on low loss electromagnetic wave p
Jan 9, 1984
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IC 6953 Hazards of Compressed-Air Jets for Ventilating Gassy MinesBy L. L. NAUS, R. D. Currie
Hazards in connection with the use of compressed-air jets for ventilating gassy mines are given little consideration by most mine officials largely because compressed air is considered the safest mean
Aug 1, 1937
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Ultralow-Frequency Through-The-Earth Electromagnetic Fire Warning Alarm System For Underground Mines - ObjectiveProvide a rapid, reliable means of warning underground miners of a fire or other emergency. Approach An ultalow-frequency electromagnetic signaling system was designed, breadboarded, and tested
Jan 1, 1988