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Bulletin 108 Melting Aluminum Chips
By H. W. Gillett, G. M. JAMES
In its work on mineral wastes the Bureau of Mines is studying losses in the melting of nonferrous metals and alloys. The greatest of these losses is that of zinc through volatilization in brass meltin
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 11 The Purchase Of Coal By The Government Under Specifications
By 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
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Bulletin 113 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mines and Mining
By J. W. Thompson
OIL AND GAS AS MINERALS. Oil and gas within the ground are minerals and the fact that they have attributes not common to other minerals because of their fugitive nature or vagrant habit, and the dispo
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 114 Manufacture of Gasoline and Benzene Toluene from Petroleum and other Hydrocarbons
By C. B. DUTTON, W. F. RITTMAN, E. W. Dean, M. S. HOWARD
NOMENCLATURE USED IN THIS REPORT. In this report the ending ene has been used throughout, except in the bibliography and in quotations from the writings of previous investigators, for all aromatic hyd
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 115 Coal-Mine Fatilities in the United States
By Albert H. Fay
The first data compiled by the Bureau of Mines relating to coal- mine accidents in the United States were published in Bulletin 69," in which the total fatalities by years and States were tabulated fr
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 116 Methods of Sampling Delivered Coal
By GEORGE S. POPE
This bulletin is a revision of Bulletin 63 and is published by the Bureau of Mines in order that purchasers of coal for Government, State, municipal, or private use may be informed regarding advances
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 122 The Principles and Practice of Sampling Metallic Metallurgical Materials
By Edward Keller
The work covered by this report was undertaken at the request of Dr. J. A. Holmes, late Director of the Bureau of Mines, to whom the writer had been recommended by C. W. Goodale and E. P. Mathewson, o
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 124 Sandstone Quarrying in the United States
By Oliver Bowles
The term" sandstone" is applied to a rock composed of mineral grains smaller than pebbles, cemented together more or less firmly. "Conglomerate" is the name given to a rock composed of pebbles, or peb
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 127 Gold Dredging in the United States
By Charles Janin
The recovery of gold from sands and gravels is one of the oldest forms of mining; it antedates history and has been practiced by savage peoples. In North America the search for placer gold has been a
Jan 1, 1918
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Bulletin 129 The Fusibility of Coal Ash and The Determination of the Softening Temperature
By ALBERT E. HALL, Arno C. Fieldner, Alexander L. Field
As a safeguard against excessive clinker troubles, specifications for the purchase of coal can be drawn to include the "softening" or "fusing" temperature of the ash. The value of such information has
Jan 1, 1918
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Bulletin 130 Blast-Furnace Breakouts, Explosions, and Slips, and Methods of Prevention
By F. H. Willcox
This publication is the third of a series of reports on hazards and the prevention of accidents at blast-furnace plants that is being published by the Bureau of Mines, Technical Paper 106a being the f
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 134 The Use of Mud Laden Fluid in Oil and Gas Wells
By WILLIAM F. McMURRAY, James O. Lewis
The Bureau of Mines is investigating the technology of petroleum and its products, the investigation including well-drilling methods and the transportation, treatment, and utilization of petroleum and
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 137 The Use of Permissible Explosives in the Coal Mines of Illinois
By JOHN W. KOSTER, JAMES R. FLEMING
The following report is made through the Bureau of Mines as a result of the work under the cooperative agreement with the State geological survey and the engineering experiment station of the Universi
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 14 Briqueting Tests Of Lignite At Pittsburg, Pa.
By CHARLES L. WRIGHT
Coals may be divided into six classes-anthracite, semi anthracite, semibituminous, bituminous, subbituminous, and lignite. The first three cla~ can be distinguished by dHferences of composition, parti
Jan 1, 1911
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Bulletin 140 Occupational Hazards at Blast Furnace Plants and Accident Prevention
By FREDERICK H. WILLCOX
In the past the blast-furnace industry was under the stigma of being one of the most prolific sources of killed or seriously inj ured and permanently disabled workmen of any of the industries of the c
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 141 Yearbook of the Bureau of Mines 1916
By VAN. H. MANNING
Probably no year in the history of the United States showed greater progress in the mineral industries than 1916. Although this progress was undoubtedly stimulated by the war in Europe, which caused e
Jan 1, 1917
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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
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Bulletin 145 Measuring the Temperature of Gases in Boiler Settings
By Henry Kreisinger, J. F. Barkley
This book is one of a series of publications being issued by the Bureau of Mines for the purpose of disseminating information in regard to the methods by which the fuels in this' country may be used m
Jan 1, 1918
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Bulletin 146 Technology of Salt Making in the United States
By W. C. Phalen
During the search for deposits of soluble potash salts in the United States, carried on by the United States Geological Survey, much infor- mation was collected on the salt resources and industry of t
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 147 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mines and Mining
By J. W. Thompson
RAILROAD GRANT-MDIERALS. Diatomaceous or infusorial earth when found in such quantity and quality as to render lands containing deposits valuable therefor are mineral lands within the meaning of the m
Jan 1, 1917