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Bulletin 235 Mine Timber Its Selection Storage Treatment and Use
By R. R. Hornor, Harry E. Tufft
The purpose of this bulletin is to point out some of the benefits and economies to be derived by selecting, preparing, storing, preserving, and utilizing mine timber more carefully and to give some sp
Jan 1, 1925
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Bulletin 234 Screen Sizing of Coal Ores and Other Minerals
By Thomas Fraser, E. A. Holbrook
The data in this bulletin were obtained during an investigation of screening practice by the University of Illinois engineering experiment station and the United States Bureau of Mines under a coopera
Jan 1, 1925
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Coal Transport by Automatic Rope Haulages at the Brown Coal Workings of the State Electricity Commission at Yallourn, Victoria
GENERALTHE coal deposit, where it is being worked, consists of a bed of brown coal varying in thickness from 120 ft. to 200 ft., covered by an overburden of clay, drift, loam, etc., of a thickness of
Jan 1, 1924
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Mines and Mineral Deposits of Canada<
By R. P. D. Graham
It is almost exactly two hundred years since the foundations of the mining and metallurgical industries in Canada were laid. There '."'as nothing spectacular about this early start. It had t
Jan 1, 1924
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The Cromwell Pool
By A. KROENLEIN
THE Cromwell 'Pool has been the outstanding development in Oklahoma during the year 1924. . Tonkawa contributed the deep "Slick Sand" bit apparently its 'peak has been reached and like other
Jan 1, 1924
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Development and Use of Industrial Explosives
By Arthur La Motte
I NDUSTRIAL explosives, as distinguished from military explosives, include high explosives and blasting powder. The high explosives which are best known are straight dynamite, gelatin dynamite, ammoni
Jan 1, 1924
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The Deepest Mine in the World
By Thomas Read
AMONG the large number of deep mines in the world there are several which do not differ much in depth. The St. John del Rey mine, in Brazil, has reached a vertical depth of 6726 ft. below the top of i
Jan 6, 1923
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Sulphur (131f61e4-9235-4437-8d66-c46dba220c97)
By F. W. Guernsey
Of all the elements, sulphur occupies a place by itself. It is mined in situ, in such quantities and of such purity that, as regards the tonnage produced, it is the first of any element on the list. I
Jan 1, 1923
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Bulletin 204 Underground Ventilation at Butte
By Daniel Harrington
For several years the United States Bureau of Mines has been making a study of ventilation in metal mines, this study covering practically all the important mining districts of the country. One of the
Jan 1, 1923
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Bulletin 221 Production and Briquetting of Carbonized Lignite
By E. J. Babcock, W. W. Odell
The Bureau of Mines since its establishment has always taken an active interest in the utilization of lignite and in the development of the lignite dep'osits of the United States. Extensive lignite fi
Jan 1, 1923
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Bulletin 216 Bibliography of Petroleum and Allied Substances, 1919 and 1920
By E. H. Burroughs
This bulletin is the fifth in the series of petroleum bibliographies publis:\:l.ed by the Bure.au of Mines, Bulletins 149, 165, 180, and 189 being compilations for the years 1915, 1916, 1917, and 1918
Jan 1, 1923
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Bulletin 211 The Chloride Volatilization Process of Ore Treatment
By C. C. Stevenson, Thomas Varley, E. P. Barrett, ROBERT H. BRADFORD
The art of treating ores by the chloride volatilization process is still in the experimental stage. The process has not been sufficiently developed along metallurgical lines to warrant a definite stat
Jan 1, 1923
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Bulletin 241 Coal Mine Fatalities - Accidents in the U.S., 1923
By William W. Adams
Reports for the calendar year 1923 that have been transmitted to the Bureau of Mines of the Department of the Interior by mine officials of the various coal-producing States show that accidents in and
Jan 1, 1923
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Screening Tests on Fine Screens
By Hookings H. J
UNDER a contract relating to the sale of a Broken Hill concentrate, the differentiation between granular and slime concentrate is determined by the proportion of the material which will pass a 200-mes
Jan 1, 1922
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Bulletin 193 Analyses of Mine and Car Samples of Coal Collected in the Fiscal Years 1916 to 1919
By Arno C. Fieldner, J. W. Paul, WALTER A. SELVIG
Many mine samples of coal are analyzed each year in the laboratories of the Bureau of Mines. The analyses are made in connection with investigations relating to fuels belonging to or for the use of th
Jan 1, 1922
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Bulletin 195 Underground Conditions in Oil Fields
By A. W. Ambrose
The output or oil and gas rrom the producing fields in the United States is rapidly deelining. Coincident with this decline is a steadily increasing demand ror petroleum and its products, but at prese
Jan 1, 1921
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A Description of the Treatment of the Copper Impurity in the Lead Ores Smelted at the Sulphide Corporation's Works, Cockle Creek
THE question of dealing with the small quantities of copper found in a great many of the purchased ores became a factor of importance when the Sulphide Corporation decided to refine its own lead bulli
Jan 1, 1920
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Bulletin 173 Manganese
By Others, C. M. Weld
During the past two years the Bureau of Mines has issued a series of mimeographed reports giving the results of research work and experiments conducted as part of its war minerals investigations. In t
Jan 1, 1920
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Bulletin 191 Quality of Gasoline Marketed in the United States
By E. W. Dean, H. H. Hill
Gasoline has become of such commercial and military importance that it is now practically indispensable. This product is of special interest because, in addition to realizing its value, the Nation is
Jan 1, 1920
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Bulletin 144 Report of a Joint Committee Appointed from the BOM and the US Geological Survey
By BUREAU OF MINES
In July, 1918, the attention of the Secretary of the Interior WItS called to the rapidly increasing cost of producing gold and the declining output of that metal in the United States. Realizing the im
Oct 30, 1919