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RI 2856 Status Of Rock-Dusting In The United States
By D. Harrington
[Notwithstanding the fact that it is now fairly generally recognized that widespread explosions can be almost absolutely prevented in coal mines by efficient rock-dusting and that this rock-dusting ca
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2857 A Comparison Of Ground Temperatures At Different Depths And Temperature Fluctuations Of The Atmosphere ? Introduction
By E. L. Rawlins
A previous report4 has explained that pipe lines for the transmission of natural gas should be buried to minimize temperature fluctuations because when excessive the latter decrease accuracy in measur
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2858 Tests of Atmospheres in Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Tunnels between Clifton Forge VA & Hinton WV
By L. B. Berger, W. P. Yant, R. R. Sayers
"At the request of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Co. a number of tests were made to determine the temperature, humidity, and composition of the atmosphere in certain tunnels of that railroad between
Feb 1, 1928
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RI 2859 Portable Electric Cap Lamps In Alabama ? Introduction
By Frank E. Cash
The Bureau of Mines in its safety work has for a number of years advocated and recommended the use of permissible portable electric cap lamps for use in all mines. In the course of time required for t
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2860 Flotation Of Low-Grade Phosphate Ores ? Introduction
By H. M. Lawrence
The recovery of phosphate rack from the ores in the land-pebble district of Florida is a simple washing and screening operation. In the gashing plants coarse phosphate only is saved. Log-Washer overfl
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2861 Seventeenth Semi-Annual Motor Gasoline Survey
By E. C. Lane
The motor gasoline that is being marketed in the United States this winter is in general, more volatile than that sold a year ago. This increase in volatility is shown by a lowering of the distillatio
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2862 A Rapid Corrosion Test For Gasoline ? Introduction
By H. P. Rue
For the proper control of gasoline treating plants there is need of a quick test for corrosion. In "sweetening" gasoline that is, in treating it to remove evil smelling mercaptans or to convert them t
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2863 Explosibility of Sulphide Dusts in Metal Mines
By E. D. Gardner, Edmund Stein
"IntroductionMassive sulphides occurring in metal mines are inflammable and furnish the fuel for many mine fires. Actual sampling has shown that dangerous amounts of sulphur dioxide and hydrogen sulph
Mar 1, 1928
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RI 2866 A Comparison Of The Results Obtained With The Oxygen-Bomb And Carius Methods In Determining Sulphur In The Heavier Petroleum Oils ? Introduction
By John M. Devine
The oxygen bomb-is used extensively for determining sulphur in petroleum, although it has been suspected that the results obtained with this method are somewhat lower than the true varies. In this pap
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2867 Titanium In Bauxite Ores And Sludges
By Will H. Coghill
Titanium is a well-known component of bauxite ores, sometimes occurring in sufficient quantity to mace its recovery worth considering. This question has been raised by some of the companies lixiviatin
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2868 Insulated Mine-Car Coupling
By C. W. Owings, F. E. Cash
"Transportation of explosives in mines is extremely hazardous, and where electric haulage is employed the danger is intensified. Insulated mine-car couplings have been adopted by at least five compani
Apr 1, 1928
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RI 2869 The Production Of High-Alumina Slags In The Blast Furnace For The Manufacture Of Alumina Cement
By T. L. Joseph
The purpose of this article is to describe briefly the operation of a 6-ton blast furnace on a charge of bauxite, limestone, iron ore, and cast-iron turnings and to point out the bearing which smeltin
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2870 The Occurrence of Jarosite Minerals in Oxidized Lead Ores as a Factor in Metal Losses (0c56b056-1e96-4d0f-94c0-a6e2e8e1654b)
By R. E. Head, Virgil Miller
"INTRODUCTIONRecent investigations at the Intermountain Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Salt Lake City indicate that metallurgists have given little attention to the occurrence of jarosit
Apr 1, 1928
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RI 2870 The Occurrence Of Jarosite Minerals In Oxidized Lead Ores As A Factor In Metal Losses
By R. E. Head
[Recent investigations at the Intermountain Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Salt Lake City indicate that metallurgists have given little attention to the occurrence of jarosite minerals i
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2871 Flue Dusts from Copper Smelters of the Southwest: Composition of Treatment
By William A. Sloan
"In smelting operations, finely divided material called ""flue dust"" is carried by the moving gases from the roasters and furnaces; it is partly settled and recovered in the flue system. The flue dus
May 1, 1928
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RI 2872 The Use of Brattice Cloth in Coal Mines
By George S. Rice, C. W. Owings
"Brattice cloth is an important material in coal-mine ventilation practically all coal mines use some brattice cloth, gassy mines a large amount. It is employed in three ways:Crosscut brattices.Curtai
May 1, 1928
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RI 2873 Notes on Extraction and Recovery of Radium, Vandium
By 1928-05-01
"The carnotite ores of Colorado and Utah were the chief source of radium for many years. In the fall of 1922; news of the very rich deposits of radium ore discovered in the Belgian Congo caused almost
May 1, 1928
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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
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RI 2875 Accident-Severity Rates For Certain Mines & Quarries In 1927.
By W. W. Adams
During the calendar year 1927 the United States Bureau f Mines conducted, for the third consecutive year, a safety contest among more than 250 mines and quarries. Aside from its underlying purpose to
Jan 1, 1928
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RI 2876 Use Of The Acetylene Tetrachloride Method Of Porosity Determination In Petroleum Engineering Field Studies
By Chase E. Sutton
The porosity of a sand is usually the measure of its capacity for holding fluid, although porosity is sometimes selective; that is, a small percentage of the actual pore space (voids), particularly in
Jan 1, 1928