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Injury Experience In The Coking Industry, 1952 - Detailed Analysis Of Safety Factors And Related Employment Data - Introduction And SummaryBy Seth T. Reese
THE INJURY DATA and experience at coke ovens in the United States for 1952 are presented in this bulletin under the following general sections: (A) General injury experience: Tables 1 to 9: Contain
Jan 1, 1955
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RI 6188 Effects Of Mechanical Properties Of Material On Cratering: A Laboratory Study ? SummaryBy J. Burlin Johnson
This report describes an investigation of the relationship between crater dimensions formed in laboratory blasting experiments and the mechanical properties of the material cratered. Scaled field data
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 4962 Blasting No Cut Hole Raise Rounds Using Millisecond DelaysBy Wing G. Agnew, Paul L. Russell
"INTRODUCTION During the past few years, the development of millisecond-delay electric blasting caps has made possible a more flexible control over timing the firing of individual charges in blasting,
Apr 1, 1953
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RI 4523 Laboratory Study Of Asphalts From Native Bitumens And Bituminous SandstonesBy Rethel L. Hubbard
Fourteen straight-run asphalts were prepared in the laboratory from bitumens obtained from three sources: (1) native bitumen from Rozel Point, Utah, (2). bitumen extracted from Athabaska bituminous sa
Jan 1, 1949
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RI 5856 Hafnium Content Of Domestic And Foreign Zirconium Minerals ? SummaryBy H. D. Hess
This report presents the results of laboratory mineral evaluations conducted by the federal Bureau of Mines under the joint sponsorship of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the Bureau a! Shi
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 4698 Petroleum-Engineering Study Of The Carthage Gas Field, Panola County, Tex.By C. J. Wilhelm
The Carthage field, in Pamela County, Tex., is one of the largest gas-condensate in respect to both areal extent and volume of recoverable gas in the United States. The field (shown in fig. 1) is appr
Jan 1, 1950
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RI 3459 National Safety Competition Of 1938By W. W. Adams, T. D. Lawrence
"The National Safety Competition of 1938, the fourteenth of its kind conducted by the Bureau of Mines in which bronze trophies known as Sentinels of Safety are awarded to winning companies, has just b
Aug 1, 1939
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RI 4460 Explosive Properties Of HydrazineBy Frank E. Scott
During the past year interest in the use of hydrazine and hydrazine hydrate as a fuel has increased in the United States; For this reason it was felt to be desirable to obtain information on the explo
Jan 1, 1949
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IC 9197 Effectiveness Of Catalytic Converters On Diesel Engines Used In Underground MiningBy B. T. McClure
Oxidizing catalytic converters are sometimes used by underground mine operators as an emission control device to reduce odor, hydrocarbon (HC), and carbon monoxide (CO) emissions from diesel equipment
Jan 1, 1988
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RI 3494 Flocculation As An Aid In The Clarification Of Coal Washery WaterBy Walter Wood, J. T. H. Cannarella, H. F. Yancey, R. E. Zane
More than 50,000,000 tons of bituminous coal and probably about the same quantity of anthracite are cleaned annually in the United States by wet methods. The water, fine coal, and impurities from the
Feb 1, 1940
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RI 9159 - A Tomographic Computer Program With Constraints To Improve Reconstructions for Monitoring In Situ Mining LeachateBy Daryl R. Tweeton
The Bureau of Mines is investigating possible applications of geophysics to monitor leachate during in situ mining. Tomographic reconstruc-tion of seismic or electromagnetic crosshole data appears app
Jan 1, 1985
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RI 6979 Correction For Nonuniformity Of The Bore Of A Capillary Tube ViscosimeterBy John E. Miller
Absolute viscosity values for gases usually are determined with a capillary tube viscosimeter, One of the correction factors applied to the experimental data is that for nonuniformity of the capillary
Jan 1, 1967
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RI 5574 Hydrogenating Shale Oil And Catalytic Cracking Of Hydrogenated Stocks ? SummaryBy C. M. Frost
Two Federal Bureau of Mines recycle hydrogenation experiments to prepare catalytic cracking feed stock were made at 3,000 pounds pressure with crude shale oil retorted from Green River (Colo.) shale i
Jan 1, 1960
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RI 2265 Sanitation in Planning and Developing Oil-Shale Camps_RedactedBy Arthur L. Murray
"Oil-shale camps are peculiarly favored, in that before they are established it can be ascertained with a,of certainty, that the life of the project is not limited. Unlike camps at metal mines, where
Jun 1, 1921
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IC 7802 Physical Properties Of Low-Boiling Phenols - A Literature Survey ? Introduction And SummaryBy Clarence Karr
In 1955 the Federal Bureau of Mines established a low-temperature tar laboratory at its new Appalachian Experiment Station in Morgantown, W. Va. The objective of the laboratory is to investigate the y
Jan 1, 1957
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IC 8475 Analyses Of Natural Gases, 1969 ? IntroductionBy L. E. Cardwell
This publication contains routine analyses and related source data for 390 natural gas samples from 22 States and five foreign countries. Of this total, 385 samples were collected during calendar year
Jan 1, 1970
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RI 6448 Benefidating Low-Grade Chromites From the Stillwater Complex, MontanaBy G. V. Sullivan, G. F. Workentine
Beneficiation studies were conducted by the Bureau of Mines on three samples of low- grade chromite - bearing material from the Stillwater complex of Montana . The objective of the study was to develo
Jan 1, 1964
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RI 5737 Applying Modern Instrumental Techniques To Oilfield Water Analysis ? Summary And IntroductionBy David M. Gullikson
As part of its program of petroleum production research the Federal Bureau of Mines has long been engaged in the study and development of systems of analysis of oilfield waters (8, 12, 20, 21, 22, 27,
Jan 1, 1961
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RI 6833 Delineation of Texas Lignite Beds By Statistical TechniquesBy Jr. Koch
Statistical methods applied at the Bureau of Mines Denver Mining Research Center to data from metallic ore bodies were used to evaluate lignite reserves from core data and to predict the extent of lig
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 5333 A Correlation Of Pressure Buildup In Oil Wells With Completion Practice For A Deep California Field ? Summary And IntroductionBy Frank C. Morris
It is generally recognized that the productivity and ultimate recovery of an oil well may be reduced as a result of reduction in permeability of the sand at the well bore by invasion of filtrates and
Jan 1, 1957