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Coal Industry Has Biggest Peacetime Year
By Evan Evans
IT is appropriate to evaluate 1947 in review as a year of a peacetime record production of about 676,000,000 tons of coal (anthracite and bituminous), closely approaching the extraordinary wartime out
Jan 1, 1948
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Coal Industry in Utah
By OTTO HERRES
UTAH has enormous deposits of high-grade bituminous coal. The United States Geological Survey estimates that there are 13,130 sq. mi. of land in Utah known to contain workable coal and these extensive
Jan 1, 1925
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Coal Industry Must Institute Research
By A. W. Gauger
SMELTING of iron ore, manufacture of steel, and the fabrication of ferrous metal products are all processes that require energy. Charcoal was adequate, to supply this energy for the relatively simple
Jan 1, 1941
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Coal Looks Secure For The Seventies
By Richard L. Gordon, Charles J. Johnson
Electric power demand doubles about every ten years, and because of the associated burgeoning fuel requirements, power stations absorb over half of the coal output in the United States. Throughout the
Jan 1, 1971
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Coal Looks To The Future
By T. Carl Shelton
The coal industry of the United States in 1967 had reasons to be both exuberant and concerned about its present and future role in the economy of the country. Continuing a momentum that began in the e
Jan 2, 1968
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Coal Market Study For The Eastern Interior Province To 2040
By Ronald F. Ayers
The basic research for this study was conducted by Battelle's Columbus Laboratories in 1974. The high-sulfur content of coal threatens to erode its competitive position in the future. The impact
Jan 1, 1978
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Coal Men Have Interesting Program at Pittsburgh; Efforts of the Young Men Featured
By AIME AIME
INDUSTRIAL Pittsburgh, the center of the coal and iron and steel industry of the world, was host to the Coal Division at its Fall Meeting held there on Oct. 21 and 22 at the William Penn Hotel. The pa
Jan 1, 1936
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Coal Men Meet in Cleveland
THE National Coal Association held its annual meeting at Cleveland on Nov. 14-16, 1928, having changed the time from the spring to the autumn to avoid conflict with the great number of meetings ordina
Jan 1, 1928
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Coal Men Meet In West Virginia
At a time when Congressional stiffening of health and safety regulations in the nation's coal mines seems all but an afterthought, when the problems confronting both mine operator and worker are
Jan 12, 1969
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Coal Mine Bumps Can Be Eliminated
By H. E. Mauck
The many factors that control bumping must be carefully studied for each coal seam where bumps occur, and specifications known to exclude bumping should be incorporated in the mining plans. This calls
Jan 9, 1958
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Coal Mine Development in Alaska
By Albert L. Toenges
Alaska requires an adequate fuel supply for its development, and has large potential coal reserves ranging from lignite to subbituminous and anthracite. Coal production in the Territory now is less t
Jan 1, 1949
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Coal Mine Face Ventilation Systems: New Concepts And Underground Results
By Edward F. Divers
Face ventilation is generally the most critical area in the coal mine ventilation system. Various studies have repeatedly shown that good ventilation is by far the most effective and least costly meth
Jan 1, 1982
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Coal Mine Ground Control Problems Associated with a High Horizontal Stress Field
By James R. Aggson, John C. Curran
In a cooperative research effort, the US Bureau of Mines Denver Mining Research Center and the Pittston Co. investigated floor heave ground control problems that have plagued underground coal mining o
Jan 1, 1980
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Coal Mine Roadway Stability in Relation to Lateral Tectonic Stress - Western Canada
By M. L. Jeremic
Mining practice and underground studies show that, besides mining stresses, lateral tectonic stress also influences roadway stability. Roadways perpendicular to the direction of major lateral stres
Jan 1, 1982
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Coal Miners Training School, Dawson. N. M.
By W. D. BRENNAN
FOR a considerable number of years past, there has been a shortage of experienced coal miners at the coal mine of the Phelps-Dodge Corp. This is probably due, to some extent, to the mines being so far
Jan 1, 1929
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Coal Mining
By James D. Reilly
13.1-1. Introduction. COAL RESERVES OF THE UNITED STATES. Bituminous coal is the most abundant fossil fuel in America. With reserves of 1,660 billion tons and assumed recovery of 5070, there is more t
Jan 1, 1968
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Coal Mining - Blasting Coal Effectively and Safely in South Illinois (with Discussion)
By J. E. Tiffany, S. S. Lubelsky
For blasting in coal mines the U. S. Bureau of Mines recommends that permissible explosives be used exclusively, that these shall be fired electrically, and that where feasible the working place shall
Jan 1, 1928
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Coal Mining - Pure Coal as a Basis for Classification (with Discussion)
By R. V. Wheeler, F. V. Tideswell
The suggestion, which appears to find increasing favor, that the elementary composition of coals should be used as the basis of their classification, makes it important that our methods of expressing
Jan 1, 1928
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Coal Mining - Requirements for Complete Face Mechanization in Coal Mining (with Discussion)
By R. Y. Williams
In the United States, fully 98 per cent. of the anthracite and bituminous coal tonnage obtained from underground operations is mined by the room-and-pillar system. Under this system, the total cost of
Jan 1, 1928
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Coal Mining - The Classification of Coal (with Discussion)
By Clarence A. Seyler
The object of all classification is to group together things which are alike, and separate those which are unlike. This object is essentially a practical one, enabling us to apply past experience to n
Jan 1, 1928