Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
OFR-1(C)-87 Assessment Of Whole Body Vibration Levels Of Coal Miners - Volume III: Low Frequency Vibration Exposure And Seat PerformanceBy Paul J. Remington
The field data gathered as part of the measurements described in Volumes I and II were re-analyzed in the low frequency regime (.1 Hz to 1 Hz) where motion sickness normally occurs. These data were co
Jan 1, 1984
-
RI 4183 Elimination of Iron in Ammonium Sulfate Process for Production of Alumina ClayBy A. T. Sweet, G. Douglas Gardner
"INTRODUCTION In the ammonium sulfate process for the production of alumina from clay,,3/ the clay is baked with amonium sulfate at about 400ºC. to form anhydrous ammonium alum and free ammonia or amm
Jan 1, 1948
-
OFR-28-87 Development Of A Contaminant Diagnostic MonitorThe development of an onboard contaminant diagnostic monitor to continuously measure contaminant level in a mining machine was advanced to a prototype stage in this contract. Several concepts were inv
Jan 1, 1983
-
Bulletin 11 The Purchase Of Coal By The Government Under SpecificationsBy GEORGE S. POPE
This bulletin is the third of a series a showing the results of ment purchases of coal according to specifications as to its quality and giving typical forms of proposals for supplying coal and genera
Jan 1, 1910
-
IC 8901 Real-Time Calculation Of Product-Of-Combustion Spread In A Multilevel MineBy John C. Edwards
A computer program, developed for the Bureau of Mines under contract, predicts in a quasi-steady-state approximation the ventilation and contaminant concentrations and temperatures when a fire occurs
Jan 1, 1982
-
RI 3299 Anhydrous Sodium Sulphate From Saline Deposits Or Brines By A Four-Stage ProcessBy J. E. Conley
Available statistics show that the demands of the American chemical industry for sodium sulphate have been increasing slightly in recent years. The supply from domestic sources, particularly In the fo
Jan 1, 1936
-
IC 7592 Mines And Mineral Deposits (Except Fuels) Broadwater County, Mont. ? Introduction And SummaryBy Glenn C. Reed
This report is one of a series describing investigations within the Missouri River Basin in Montana made by mining engineers of the Bureau of Mines Minerals Division, Region II. The primary purpose of
Jan 1, 1951
-
OFR-30-76 Design Evaluation For Development Of An Advanced Bolter Module - Section 1 - SummaryThis report covers the work performed by the Advanced Products Division of FMC Corporation under Bureau of Hines Contract J0155166, Design Evaluation for Development of an Advanced Bolter Module.
Jan 1, 1975
-
Analysis Of Nonstandard Noise Dosimeter Microphone PositionsBy Efrem R. Reeves, David C. Byrne
This study was conducted as part of a project involving the evaluation of a new type of noise exposure monitoring paradigm. Laboratory tests were conducted to assess how “nonstandard” dosimeter microp
-
RI 3653 National Safety Competition of 1941By W. W. Adams, T. D. Lawrence
"The National Safety Competition conducted by the Bureau of Mines, United States Department of the Interior for the promotion of safety in mines and quarries, has just been closed for seventeenth cons
Jul 1, 1942
-
IC 8154 Mining Methods And Costs, Inspiration Consolidated Copper Co. Open-Pit Mine, Gila County, Ariz. ? SummaryBy W. R. Hardwick
This paper describing the mining methods of the Inspiration Consolidated Copper Co. is one of a series being prepared by the Bureau of Mines on mining methods and costs in various mining districts of
Jan 1, 1963
-
OFR-2(1)-78 Water Management In Oil Shale Mining - Volume 1- Main TextBy A. Brown
This report details work performed and results obtained in a study of the water management aspects of oil shale mining and retorting in the Piceance Creek Basin. Three specific sites were investigated
Jan 1, 1977
-
IC 7269 Marketing Magnesite And Allied Products ? IntroductionBy Charles L. Harness
Magnesia (MgO) has a variety of uses, and it has become increasingly important as a war material because of the imperative demand for refractories to line metallurgical furnaces, and because magnesia
Jan 1, 1943
-
IC 8422 Mineral Resource Valuation For Public PolicyBy Donald S. Colby
This Bureau of Mines report is essentially a handbook, or manual, for making the type of mineral resource valuation commonly required for such public policy problems as mineral leasing. The princi
Jan 1, 1969
-
OFR-70-82 Keep Alive Mercury Mine Lighting SystemBy J. C. Engel
Recent innovations in mine safety include the use of mercury vapor lamps for mine vehicle illumination. Such lamps, however, extinguish whenever the line voltage at the machine momentarily sags or is
Jan 1, 1979
-
MLA 44-82 - Mineral Resource Potential Of The Freel Peak Rare II Area (No. 5271), El Dorado County, California ? SummaryBy Thomas J. Peters
In 1979 and 1980, the U.S. Bureau of Mines and U.S. Geological Survey conducted a mineral survey of the 15,600 acre (6,310 ha) Freel Peak RARE II area (No. 5271) in the Lake Tahoe Management Unit. T
Jan 1, 1982
-
OFR-102-84 A Feasibility Study For The Detection Of Weak Electromagnetic Signal/Bursts With Hard-Limited ArraysBy M. Kanefsky
Two channel polarity coincidence and polarity difference statistics are analyzed. The signal, common to both channels, consists of sinusoidal bursts where the exact frequency of the signal is nearly k
Jan 1, 1981
-
RI 5954 Low-Temperature Heat Capacities And Entropies At 298.15° K. Of Three Calcium Vanadates ? Introduction And SummaryBy E. G. King
An earlier Bureau of Mines report4 provided low-temperature heat-capacity and entropy data for three sodium vanadates. This report continues the study of vanadates by presenting analogous data for thr
Jan 1, 1961
-
RI 3349 Recovery Of Potash From Tailing Of A Porphyry Copper PropertyBy G. L. Oldright, Virgil Miller, F. K. Shelton, Keck. W. E., Horst Sieg
Potash is one of the principal foods and is necessary for the growth of most vegetables, grains, and fruits. For many years, this country depended entirely upon foreign sources for its supply of potas
Jun 1, 1937
-
MLA 105-82 - Mineral Investigation Of The Wonder Mountain Rare II Area (No. 6086), Mason County, Washington - SummaryBy Stephen R. Iverson
Manganese deposits exist in the Wonder Mountain RARE II area (fig. 1). The manganese mineral is primarily bementite, a silicate. It occurs with Jasper and manganese oxides in tabular or irregular lens
Jan 1, 1982