Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
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
-
Bulletin 196 Coal-Mine Fatalities in the United States, 1919
By Albert H. Fay
Through the hearty cooperation of the State coal-mine inspectors, the bureau is able to present in this paper a a complete statement of the coal-mine fatalities occurring throughout the United States
Jan 1, 1920
-
Bulletin 197 Sampling and Examination of Mine Gases
By George A. Burrell, G. W. Jones, Frank M. Seibert
In this bulletin, the style of Bulletin 42 has been closely followed. Much of the material is reprinted on the following pages in its original form, and changes have been made only where manifestly ne
Jan 1, 1926
-
Bulletin 198 Regulation of Explosives in the United States
By Charles E. Munroe
At the outset of the war the uncontrolled production and possession of explosives obviously became a serious menace to the safety of persons and property and the successful conduct of military opera-
Jan 1, 1921
-
Bulletin 199 Experimental Production of Alloy Steels
By H. W. GILLETr, E. L. Mack
The production of small heats of alloy steels on an experimental scale is often desirable in beginning the study of new alloy steels before large amounts of expensive alloys are used in heats of comme
Jan 1, 1922
-
Bulletin 20 The Explosibility Of Coal Dust
By George S. Rice
This bulletin traces the growth in the belief in the explosibility of coal dust, summarizes the experiments and mine investigations that have established this belief, and gives the present status of p
Jan 1, 1911
-
Bulletin 200 Evaporation Loss of Petroleum in the Mid Continent Field
By J. H. Wiggins
In 1919 the United States was threatened with a shortage of gaso- line. In spite of this well-known fact, a detailed field investigation has shown that in one stage only of handling crude oil the volu
Jan 1, 1922
-
Bulletin 201 Prospecting and Testing for Oil and Gas
By R. E. Collom
The commercial development of petroleum and natural gas fields has reached its present status within 60 years and is still considered by some operators to be "100 per cent wildcatting." 1 A tendency t
Jan 1, 1922
-
Bulletin 202 Electric Brass-Furnace Practice
By H. W. Gillett, E. L. Mack
Prior to 1911 the literature on melting brass by electricity consisted entirely-save for some suggestions made in patent literature but not actually worked out-of a few observations by farseeing men '
Jan 1, 1922
-
Bulletin 203 Central District Bituminous Coals as Water-Gas Generator Fuel
By W. A. Dunkley, W. W. Odell
About two-thirds of the manufactured gas supplied to the public by the gas plants in the Illinois district is cnrbureted water gas. The leading generator fuel is coke, ma.de in by-product c.oke ovens
Jan 1, 1924
-
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
-
Bulletin 205 Flotation Tests of Idaho Ores
By Clarence A. Wright, JAMES T. NORTON, JAMES G. PARMELEE
The object of this paper is to give to mining companies and to all others who are interested some idea of the possibilities in the treatment, by differential flotation, of lead-zinc ores of the Coeur
Jan 1, 1921
-
Bulletin 206 Petroleum Laws of All America
By J. W. Thompson
Be if enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That deposits of coal, phosphate, sodium, oil, oil shale, or gas, and lands containing s
Jan 1, 1921
-
Bulletin 207 The Analytical Distillation of Petroleum and its Products
By N. A. C. Smith, E. W. Dean, W. A. Jacobs, H. H. Hill
Fractional distillation is the most important process in the commercial refining of petroleum. The same procedure, conducted on a small scale, is the basis of a number of analytical methods of wide ap
Jan 1, 1922
-
Bulletin 208 The Electrothermic Metallurgy of Zinc
By B. M. O'Harra
Zinc smelting is frequently termed a ba.ckward art. The term is hardly true, for great progress has been made in recent years in the design and in the thermal efficiency of the retort furnace, in the
Jan 1, 1923
-
Bulletin 209 Fusibility of Ash from Coals of the US
By A. C. Fieldner, W. A. Selvig
Information concerning the fusibility of coal ash has become of considerable value to the consumer of coal, mainly in connection with the troublesome formation of clinker resulting from the melting of
Jan 1, 1922
-
Bulletin 21 Significance of Drafts in Steam Boiler Practice
By Henry Kreisinger, WALTER T. RAY
This preliminary bulletin was written as the first of a series of several on the significance of drafts in steam-boiler practice, the succeeding bulletins to be along the same lines but of a more adva
Jan 1, 1911
-
Bulletin 210 Oil Shale an Historical Technical and Economic Study
By Martin J. Gavin
The results of investigations of the oil-shale resources of the United States were first published by the United States Geological Survey in 1915.1 Other reports 2 have followed. These reports, invest
Jan 1, 1924
-
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
-
Bulletin 212 Analytical Methods for Certain Metals
By J. P. BONARDI, C. W. Davis, R. B. Moore, J. W. MARDEN, S. C. Lind, J. E. Conley
The rare metals are becoming increasingly important to our industries. Rare-metal alloys have properties which indicate that we are only on the threshold of the possibilities of their utilization, not
Jan 1, 1923