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  • NIOSH
    Radio Propagation Measurements In Coal Mines At UHF And VLF

    By Arthur E. Goddard

    Radio propagation measurements were conducted in a coal mine at UHF (200 to 1000 MHz) and VLF (1 to 50 kHz) to characterize the transmission loss of intra-mine paths. The basic experimental parameters

    Jan 1, 1973

  • NIOSH
    RI 2151 Cooperative Store, Ajo, Arizona

    By E. D. Gardner

    "The town of Ajo is built in the desert and consisted of but a few houses when the New Cornelia Copper Co. started operations. Since there were no stores at Ajo or vicinity the New Cornelia Cooperativ

    Aug 1, 1920

  • NIOSH
    RI 2131 Durability of Electric Heaters for Gasoline Distillation

    By E. W. Dean, W. A. Jacobs

    "The petroleum division of the Bureau of Mines in its laboratory investigations, has had occasions to develop a number of types of electrical heating equipment. It was found that electric heaters coul

    Jun 1, 1920

  • NIOSH
    State Statistics – Crow Tribe

    The Crow Indian Reservation is located in the southeastern part of Montana, stretching from near Billings, in the center of the state, to the Wyoming border in the south. The Office of Surface Min

    Jan 1, 1992

  • NIOSH
    Predriven Recovery Rooms Reduce Longwall Equipment Transfer Time - Objective

    Reduce longwall equipment transfer time between panels by utilizing a predriven recovery room, and thus eliminate the premove preparation associated with most equipment recovery methods. Background

    Jan 1, 1989

  • NIOSH
    An expanded model for predicting surface coal mine drill respirable dust emissions

    By Steven J. Page

    Overexposure to airborne respirable crystalline silica dust can cause disabling or fatal respiratory disease, and mine worker exposure to silica dust continues to be an ongoing occupational health con

    Jan 1, 2008

  • NIOSH
    RI 2161 The Menace of Opening Kegs of Black Blasting Powder with Wooden Tools

    By S. P. Howell

    The Bureau of lines as repeatedly called attention to dangerous practices in the transportation and opening of kogs of black blasting powder. In 1914 Diwin Higgins (Prevention of Accidents from Explos

    Sep 1, 1920

  • NIOSH
    IC 7156 A Quarter Century Of Mechanized Mining - Notes On Permissibility

    By L. C. IlsLey

    Figure 1 is a reproduction of a chart recently prepared by the Bureau of Mines at its Pittsburgh Laboratory to show the Bureau's approval work in connection with electrically operated mining equi

    Jan 1, 1941

  • NIOSH
    RI 2874 Milling Baboquivari Ores

    By Edmund S. Leaver, Jesse A. Woolf

    "The Baboquivari mining district is about 60 miles southwest of Tucson, Ariz., the present railroad shipping point. The values are silver and gold. The silver is largely associated with the black oxid

    May 1, 1928

  • NIOSH
    Statistics-based Safety - Part 2: An Analysis of the Crushed Stone Injuries Occurring During a 10-year Span Provides Insight Into Improving Safety

    By Vijia K. Karra

    The goal of aggregates producing companies across the United States is to ensure their workers go home safely each day. At the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), researcher

  • NIOSH
    Use Of Fiber-Optics Enhances Data Transmission In Underground Mines - Objective

    Improve transmission of data from an underground mine monitoring system to a remote, mass-data storage system. Background Instrumentation systems in underground mines must operate under enviro

    Jan 1, 1986

  • NIOSH
    IC 9501 - Miners’ Views About Personal Dust Monitors

    By Erica E. Hall, Robert H. Peters, Charles Vaught, Jon C. Volkwein

    Coal workers’ pneumoconiosis is the leading cause of death due to occupational illness among U.S. coal miners. This disease is caused by miners’ exposure to excessive levels of respirable coal mine du

    Jan 2, 2008

  • NIOSH
    RI 2914 Control of a Small Mine Fire With Rock Dust

    By George McCaa, H. C. Howarth

    "During recovery operations following a recent coal-mine explosion, 12 small fires were encountered near the break line of pillar extraction in a large panel. All of the fires except one were quickly

    Feb 1, 1929

  • NIOSH
    Leadership In Escape From Underground Mine Fires

    This chapter explores leadership behavior in a life-threatening situation-fire in a coal mine. Previous chapters have discussed the database of interviews with miners who escaped from underground fire

    Jan 1, 2000

  • NIOSH
    Steel Fiber Reinforced Concrete Cribbing For Mine Roof Support ? Objective

    Improve the safety and reduce the cost of longwall entry support. Approach Replace the conventional wood cribbing with stronger, non-rotting and lower cost cribbing made of steel-fiber-reinforced

    Jan 1, 1981

  • NIOSH
    Cab With Powered Height Adjustment (Trunnion Mounted) - Objective

    Provide optimum visibility of mining operations while maintaining protection and comfort for machine operators. Approach A cab with hydraulically powered variable-height control was developed

    Jan 1, 1978

  • NIOSH
    More Water On Upwind Drum Reduces Exposure Of Shearer Operator To Dust - Objective

    Reduce longwall shearer operators' dust exposures by more effectively suppressing the dust generated by the upwind cutting drum. Approach Direct more of the shearer water supply to the upwind

    Jan 1, 1982

  • NIOSH
    IC 6682 The Present Status of the Mineral Industry

    By Scott Turner

    The settlers of a new country necessarily suffer at first from the lack of accumulated stocks of metals - in-use that are possessed in older countries . Our American colonists were at first compelled

    Jan 1, 1933

  • NIOSH
    Fugitive Carbon Based Gases Blasting Related Or Not (99e15d94-9885-42e6-999a-5694495b27e3)

    By Fred Baldassare, Marcia Harris, Kenneth K. Eltschlager

    Surface mine blasting was recently investigated as a potential source of high concentrations of stray gases found in nearby residences of western Pennsylvania. In one incident carbon monoxide was dete

  • NIOSH
    IC 6100 Electrical Accident Prevention

    By L. C. IlsLey

    The first thing to consider in prevention of electric shock is the voltage of the circuit. No person can be sure that he will not be killed, even from a 110-volt circuit, if he makes proper contact wi

    Feb 1, 1929