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RI 6025 Experimental Production Of Lightweight Basic RefractoriesBy M. E. Tyrrell
Lightweight basic refractories suitable for use in some sections of the all-basic furnace were developed. Potential advantages of such refractories are lower weight, improved resistance to thermal sho
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 4804 Magnetic Base Stations In Lake Superior Iron DistrictsBy Gordon Bath
During the summer of 1946, the Division of Geophysical Exploration of the U.S. Bureau of Mines established several primary magnetic base stations near important iron-producing districts in Minnesota,
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 3469 Progress Reports - Metallurgical Division - 32. Ore-Dressing Studies - Properties Of Suspension Mediums For Float-And-Sink Concentration - IntroductionBy F. D. DeVaney
Metallurgists and coal-washing engineers have used heavy liquids for years in studying the characteristics of ores and coal. By such means true separations can be made between the various specific-gra
Jan 1, 1940
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OFR-139-83 Leaching Of Bornite With Oxygen And Ferric Chloride As OxidantsBy Ferron A. Olson
Natural bornite (Cu5FeS4) leached in ferric chloride or in sulfuric or hydrochloric acid solutions with oxygen showed several differences. In ferric chloride 80 of the copper was leached in two stages
Jan 1, 1982
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IC 8284 Water Use In The Petroleum And Natural Gas Industries (eeba5f52-0cbc-4684-a58c-f2887b4eaf41)By Paul M. Buttermore
As part of a national canvass of water use the Bureau of Mines compiled data on water requirements in the petroleum and natural gas industries for the calendar year 1962, specifically in well drilling
Jan 1, 1966
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IC 8284 Water Use In The Petroleum And Natural Gas IndustriesBy Paul M. Buttermore
As part of a national canvass of water use the Bureau of Mines compiled data on water requirements in the petroleum and natural gas industries for the calendar year 1962, specifically in well drilling
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 4941 Preparation Characteristics Of Coal From Jefferson County, Pa. ? IntroductionBy William L. Crentz
Late in the nineteenth century en active coal-mining industry was begun in the Lower Freeport bed near Reynoldsville, Pa., where the bed thickened to more than 10 feet in places . The coal was readily
Jan 1, 1953
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OFR-46(2)-81 Risk Analysis For Rock Slopes In Open Pit Mines - Final Technical Report - Part II - Limit Equilibrium Analysis For Rock Wedge StabilityBy Herbert H. Einstein
Instability of rock slopes often occurs in the form of excessive movement of bodies that are bounded by discontinuities. The well known limit equilibrium analysis for wedges and blocks suffer, however
Jan 1, 1979
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RI 4905 Malleable Chromium And Its AlloysBy H. L. Gilbert
Improvements in production of high-purity chromium metal by magnesium reduction of anhydrous chlorides and by hydrogen treatment of electrolytic chromium are reported. Hydrogen-treated chromium has b
Jan 1, 1952
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IC 9271 Sources And Characteristics Of Quartz Dust In Coal MinesBy J. A. Organiscak
Quartz dust is one of the most significant ongoing health concerns in coal mining today. Since the early 1980's, the U.S. Bureau of Mines has conducted numerous studies in underground and surface
Jan 1, 1990
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Do Silicon-Oxygen Radicals Play a Role in the Quartz-Induced Hemolysis and Fibrogenicity?By Nar S. Dalal, Xianglin Shi, Val Vallyathan
"INTRODOCTIONIn an earlier communication 1 from our laboratory it was reported that mechanical crushing of coal and quartz under normal air atmosphere generates of free radicals on the particle surfac
Jan 1, 1990
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IC 7004 Thousands Killed By Coal-Mine Explosions In The United States ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
Seldom, if ever, has any mining hazard presented itself that some method has not been devised to control it to some extent; the degree of success of such control depends largely upon the intensity of
Jan 1, 1938
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OFR-115(2)-76 Technical And Economic Study Of The Modified In Situ Process For Oil Shale - Vol. II - AppendicesBy James L. Ash
This report contains the results of a technical and economic evaluation of conceptual systems for the underground mining, rubblization; and in situ retorting of deep oil shale deposits. Study efforts
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 5457 Communication Of Flame Through Cylindrical Channels ? SummaryBy H. G. Wolfhard
The propagation of explosions through short cylindrical channels has been investigated by the Bureau of Mines. In the experimental apparatus set up by the Bureau, a single such channel formed a connec
Jan 1, 1959
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IC 8205 A Study Of Dust-Control Methods For Continuous Mining Of CoalBy Floyd G. Anderson
A study was made of the effectiveness of dust-control methods being employed in connection with continuous-mining operations. Airborne dust exposures of workmen and dust loadings of return air were de
Jan 1, 1963
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OFR-144-84 Low-Profile Portable Crusher For Underground Mining Applications: Construction And TestingBy H. Miller
In recognition of the need for a portable low-profile hard rock crusher, the Bureau of Mines sponsored the development of such a unit capable of moving up as the face advances. By allowing primary ore
Jan 1, 1983
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RI 8107 Coal Mine Combustion Products: Conveyor BeltsBy Arthur M. Hartstein
The Federal Bureau of Mines, under a contract with Ultrasystems, Inc., investigated the thermal oxidative degradation characteristics of conveyor belts used in underground mines. This included the det
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 8020 Rock Fragmentation by High-Frequency FatigueBy Patrick J. Cain
The fatigue-failure characteristics under high-frequency (10 KHz) cyclic loading were determined for a marble, granite, and quartzite. The rock speci-mens were cyclicly loaded (using a high-power piez
Jan 1, 1975
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OFR-106-82 Dredge Safety Hazard AnalysisBy Louis Schaffer
A literature review concerning dredging hazards and dredge safety practices and an examination of MSHA accident and injury statistics on dredge mining in the United States provided the background for
Jan 1, 1984
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A Case Study in Applied Social Marketing: Developing an Occupational Safety and Health ProductBy Douglas F. Scott
This case study provides an example of how social marketing was applied to meet the needs of business customers. Federal regulations require that all companies develop a written program to track hazar
Jan 1, 2009