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Bulletin 38 The Origin of Coal
By David White
The purpose of the studies that form the basis of this report was to learn from microscopic examinations of coal how far and in what ways the grouping of coal by types depends on differences in the ki
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 56 First Series of Coal Dust Explosion Tests in the Experimental Mine
By W. L. EGY, GEORGES. RICE, L. M. JONES, J. K. CLEMENT
This report has been prepared, not only for the purpose of recording the results of the first series of coal-dust tests conducted in the experimental mine of the Bureau of Mines, but also to place bef
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 50 A Laboratory Study of the Inflammability of Coal Dust
By E. J. HOFFMAN, L. A. SCHOLL, J. c. W. FRAZER
The danger from coal dust in mines has been thoroughly demon- strated by experiment, and consequently the study of the inflam- mability of coal dust suspended in air, that is, the readiness with which
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 54 Foundry-Cupola Gases and Temperatures
By A. W. BELDEN
Among the investigations that the Bureau of Mines is conducting witha view to increasing efficiency in the utilization of fuels belonging to or for the use of the Government is an investigation of the
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 58 Fuel-Briquetting Investigations, July 1904 to July 1912
By C. L. Wright
In 1904 the Government began a series of fuel-testing investiga- tions at its fuel-testing plant at St. Louis, Mo. These investigations, which were placed under the supervision of the United States Ge
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 22 Analyses of Coals in the United States
By N. W. Lord
This volume contains the descriptions of the samples whose analy- ses are published in the preceding volume, Part I of this bulletin. The descriptions have been compiled from the notebooks of the per-
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 42 The Sampling and Examination of Mine Gases and Natural Gas
By George A. Burrell, Frank M. Seibert
The Bureau of Mines, as part of its designated duty of investigating the causes of mine accidents, is conducting at its experiment station in Pittsburgh, Pa., a study of mine gases. Some of the work a
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 61 Abstract of Current Decisions on Mines and Mining
By J. W. Thompson
CONVEYANCE OF COAL IN PLACES. Coal or other mineral in place may be granted and conveyed as land, separate and apart from that which underlies or overlies it. Board, etc., of Greene County v. Lattas C
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 55 The Commercial Trend of the Producter-Gas Power Plant
By R. H. Fernald
In investigating general problems that relate to the fuel resources of this country, and in testing fuels belonging to or for the use of the Government, the Bureau of Mines has given considerable atte
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 59 Investigations of Detonators and Electric Detonators
By Clarence Hall, Spencer P. Howell
Among the more important factors involved in the use of high explosives in blasting operations is the means employed to bring about the detonation of the charge. When flame is applied to high explosiv
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 66 Tests of Permissible Explosives
By Clarence Hall, Spencer P. Howell
The tests and studies begun by the United States Geological Survey in the fall of 1908 with a view to lessening the accidents attending the use of explosives in coal mining are being continued by the
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 68 Electric Switches for Use in Gaseous Mines
By R. W. Crocker, H. H. Clark
The purpose of the investigation discussed in this bulletin, one of a series dealing with the use of electricity in mines, was to study the various means and methods used to confine the flashes that o
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 71 Fullers Earth
By Charles L. Parsons
The United States produces all of the fuller's earth used for re- fining petroleum within its borders. On the other hand, most of the fuller's earth used in bleaching edible oils has been imported fro
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 62 National Mine Rescue and First Aid Conference
By Herbert M. Wilson
The act (36 Stat., 369) that established the Bureau of Mines in the Department of the Interior defined as part of the bureau's province and duty the making of "diligent investigation of the methods of
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 51 The Analysis of Black Powder and Dynamite
By Walter O. Snelling, C. G. Storm
Although descriptions of the methods of analysis of explosives are to be found in many books on explosives, and in works on engineer- ing chemistry or chemical analysis, most of these descriptions are
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 53 Mining and Treatment of Feldspar and Kaolin
By A. S. Watts
Throughout the Appalachian Mountains there are dikes of coarse granite or pegmatite, which were intruded into other rocks. These pegmatite dikes contain feldspar, quartz, white mica (muscovite), black
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 60 Hydraulic Mine Filling
By Charles Enzian
This report is issued by the Bureau of Mines as one of a series dealing with methods of increasing safety and efficiency in mining operations. It is intended purely as a preliminary statement of the p
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 69 Coal Mine Accidents in the U.S. and Foreign Countries
By Frederick W. Horton
The lack of comparable and accurate statistics of coal-mine accidents in the United States as a whole led the Bureau of Mines in 1911 to undertake the collection of such data. The importance of such s
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 64 The Titaniferous Iron Ores
By Joseph T. Singewald
The term "titaniferous magnetite" is used to designate those mag- netic ores of iron that carry more than 2 or 3 per cent of titanium. Large and easily workable deposits of these ores occur in differe
Jan 1, 1913
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Bulletin 63 Sampling Coal Deliveries
By GEORGE S. POPE
The purchase of coal by the Government under specifications depending on the heating value of the coal, its content of ash and of moisture, and other considerations, rather than upon the reputation or
Jan 1, 1913