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IC 7382 Treatment of Acid Mine Water for Breaker Use in the Anthracite Region of PennsylvaniaBy L. H. Johnson
"INTRODUCTION The Pennsylvania anthracite industry produced 53 million net tons of anthracite during 1945. Fifty-one million tons was prepared for the commercial market (3), 3/ and 2 million tons (con
Nov 1, 1946
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RI 7089 Evaluation Of Rolling Slabs Of Zinc-Copper-Titanium Alloys Cast Under Semicontinuous ConditionsBy L. A. Neumeier
Sound experimental ingots of zinc alloys for use as rolling slabs were cast with a specially constructed, semicontinuous casting machine. Nominal alloy compositions of Zn-1.0 percent Cu, Zn-0.12 and 0
Jan 1, 1968
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IC 7863 Stone Cutting And Polishing ? IntroductionBy Oliver Bowles
The term "stone" in its broader sense includes not only the well-known limestone, marble, granite, sandstone, and slate but also precious and semi precious stones and many minerals and rocks not inclu
Jan 1, 1958
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RI 7887 Laboratory Determination of Factors Affecting Storage of North Dakota Lignite - Computer Simulation of Spontaneous HeatingBy Everett A. Sondreal
Material and energy balances for stockpiled lignite were calculated by computer simulation techniques to determine the occurrence of spontaneous heating. Data on properties of lignite which affect spo
Jan 1, 1974
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RI 3027 Acrolein As A Warning Agent For Detecting Leakage Of Methyl Chloride From Refrigerators ? IntroductionBy W. P. Yant
The hazard to health from contamination of air by a noxious gas depends not only on the potential harmful response attending exposure., but also on the warning properties, which in effect may be terme
Jan 1, 1930
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RI 6030 Problems In Substituting Titanium For Manganese In Steel - SummaryBy P. G. Barnard
The Nation's steel industry is largely dependent on shipments of manganese from foreign sources for steel production. An adequate substitute for the manganese requirements of our present steel te
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 8302 Electromagnetic Technique for Locating Boreholes (f5af72e3-7203-4f97-aecf-da8dff034833)By H. Kenneth Sacks
The Bureau of Mines has developed hardware for electromagnetic (EM) detection and location of miners trapped in underground coal mines. This report describes a technique for using the developed equipm
Jan 1, 1978
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RI 8603 Canopy-Air Curtain Dust Reductions on a Gathering-Arm LoaderBy Jon C. Volkwein
The canopy-air curtain was originally developed by the Bureau of Mines to surround the operator of a continuous mining machine with a zone of clean air. This report describes the application and testi
Jan 1, 1981
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IC 8161 Ventilation Of Continuous-Miner Places In Coal MinesBy Donald P. Schlick
This report presents a representative cross section of methods success- fully used to ventilate continuous-miner places as well as various factors that should be considered when selecting auxiliary ve
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 2927 A New Type Of Laboratory Dust-Explosion ApparatusBy C. M. Bouton
Although much valuable work has been done in the study of dust explosions, the laboratory technique has not been developed to the point where the many factors involved can be properly controlled, and
Jan 1, 1929
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IC 9108 Water-Jet-Assisted RoadheadersBy Robert J. Timko
Water-jet-assisted cutting involves the use of a mechanical cutting bit in combination with a high-pressure water jet directed just in front of the bit tip. Such a jet can offer benefits in terms of i
Jan 1, 1986
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IC 9126 Hose Safety During High-Pressure Water-Jet CuttingFlexible hoses with rated working pressures up to 40,000 psi are used when high-pressure water jets are employed to cut rock or improve the performance of mining machines. Hose failures at such high p
Jan 1, 1987
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Recovering Plastics From Urban Refuse By Electrodynamic TechniquesBy Michael R. Grubbs
The Bureau of Mines is currently developing methods for reclaiming the metal and mineral values contained in unburned urban refuse. One important phase of this research deals with recovering Mastic fr
Jan 1, 1972
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RI 5291 Diamond-Bit Performance In Schist ? SummaryBy Donald M. Hausen
Diamond-bit performance and cost data accumulated by the Bureau of Mines in core-drilling schists reveal significant trends of economic interest. Low-quality, small-size drill bort were the most econo
Jan 1, 1956
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RI 6141 Trenching And Sampling Of The Rhyolite Mercury Prospect, Kuskokwim River Basin, AlaskaBy Raymond P. Maloney
The Rhyolite mercury prospect is on the south flank of Juninggulra Mountain--a large rhyolite intrusive in the Kuskokwim River region about 36 airline miles northwest of Red Devil, Alaska. Bulldozer t
Jan 1, 1962
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IC 9477 - Mining Roof Bolting Machine Safety: A Study Of The Drill Boom Vertical VelocityBy Raymond F. Helinski, Linda J. McWilliams, Sean Gallagher, Thomas R. Battenhouse, August J. Kwitowski, John R. Bartels, Dean H. Ambrose
This report examines the boom arm vertical speed for roof bolting machines to study a moving boom arm appendage at different speeds during different work scenarios. The goal of this study is to deter
Jan 5, 2005
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RI 4670 Flotation And Cyanidation Tests On A Gold-Copper Sulfide Ore From Cooke, Mont.By A. L. Engel
Many western ores containing ;old, silver, and copper can be mined and concentrated at a profit only when the recovery of those metals is high and treatment costs are low. Usually, ores containing eas
Jan 1, 1950
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Minor Metals ? ArsenicBy Arnold M. Lansche
Domestic Production.-Domestic production of white arsenic, AS,03, was derived entirely as a byproduct of smelting arsenic-containing copper ores by The Anaconda Company at Anaconda, Mont., and America
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 7333 An Ultrasonic Method For Determining The Elastic Symmetry Of MaterialsBy Thomas R. Bur
Symmetry theory, based on ground work established in the study of single crystals and experimental procedures utilizing ultrasonic pulse velocities of spherical specimens plotted on equal area polar
Jan 1, 1969
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RI 5849 Photographic Observation Of Quarry Blasting ? Summary And ConclusionsBy Benjamin Petkof
Production quarry blasts in three rock types were photographed with a high-speed camera. Analysis of the films showed that step increases sometimes occur in the horizontal velocity of the broken rock.
Jan 1, 1961