Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Health And Miscellaneous Hazards At Metal And Nonmetallic Mines - Metal -And Nonmetallic-Mine Accident-Prevention Course - Section 7 - Purpose And Scope
The first metal-mine accident-prevention course was prepared and published in 1942--45 as a series of seven miners' circulars (Nos. 51-57). The scope of the course has been broadened, revised, an
Jan 1, 1957
-
Health and Safety
By L. S. Hansen
Organized efforts toward the prevention of injuries and occupational diseases have been of comparatively recent origin in the mining industry, dating generally from the beginning of this century. Mini
Jan 1, 1973
-
Health and Safety in Mines- Falls of Ore or Rock from the Roof Much the Greatest Hazard Underground
By O. M. Schaus
REDUCED activity of mining, because of the business recession, had the effect of lowering working time, hence of reducing exposure to accidents, so it is probable that 1938 will be found to have had a
Jan 1, 1939
-
Health and Safety in Mining - Accident Rates Continue Downward Trend in Spite of Labor Difficulties
By Carl M. Fellman
LABOR disputes caused considerable turbulence in the coal mining industry during 1946. As an outcome of these disputes, a definitely fundamental change in safety procedure was instituted: establishmen
Jan 1, 1947
-
Health and Safety in Mining - Practice Is Becoming Safer in Spite of Old or Inexperienced Men
By C. M. Fellman
THE over-all picture of safety in mining has been encouraging during the past few years, and in mining activities as a whole the trend in accident occurrence is downward. This is the more noteworthy w
Jan 1, 1946
-
Health And Safety In Tunneling
By S. M. Jarrett, W. B. Schmidt
Within the last year, the Nation has been shocked by two major tunneling disasters. Almost exactly a year ago 17 men died in the San Fernando Tunnel in an explosion attributed to gas. A few months lat
Jan 1, 1997
-
Health And Safety R&D In The Canadian Coal Mining Industry
By David B. Gladwin
Regional characteristics in the coal resource base have resulted in application of different mining methods across Canada. Longwall methods predominate in eastern Canada, whereas open pit, hydraulic a
Jan 1, 1982
-
Health Monitoring of Underground Mining Machines
By Steinbrucker G
Improvements in mining by the application of electronics necessitates analy-sis of the objectives and problems. A detailed analysis has shown that increased tunel-ling performance is one of the most i
Jan 1, 1985
-
Health Of The Underground Construction Industry Evident At RETC
In spite of a global economy that continues to seesaw and a U.S. Congress that is at odds with the president and themselves, cities around the world are still spending billions on their infrastructure
Jan 1, 2011
-
Health, safety, and mine environments research in the mining laboratories of CANMET, Natural Resources Canada
By M. C. Bétournay, J. E. Udd
"The Mining Laboratories of CANMET are the principal federal government vehicle for the delivery of mining research in Canada. With research being performed at five locations, which are mostly mining
Jan 1, 1997
-
Heap Leaching Practices At Ortiz Gold Mine, Santa Fe County, New Mexico
By Robin J. Hickson
The Ortiz Mine is operated by Gold Fields Mining Corporation, a subsidiary of Consolidated Gold Fields Ltd., one of the world's major gold producers. The Ortiz Mine is Gold Fields only heap leach
Jan 1, 1981
-
Heartland Corridor Tunnels
By Frank P. Frandina, Michael J. Loehr, Paul E. Gabryszak
The Heartland Corridor Clearance Improvement Project is part of a regional Public-Private initiative to allow double stack container trains a direct route from the Port of Norfolk through Virginia, We
Jan 1, 2007
-
Heartland Corridor Tunnels (203bfe6b-811f-4d1d-8e50-61c86efb90ba)
By Frank P. Frandina
The Heartland Corridor Clearance Improvement Project is part of a regional Public-Private initiative to allow double stack container trains a direct route from the Port of Norfolk through Virginia, We
Jan 1, 2008
-
Heat Flow Models in Ventilation Planning
By A. J. Dickson, A. M. Starfield
This paper reviews the progress made to date in the development of computer models of heat and moisture transfer from rock surfaces to the ventilating air in deep-level mines. The application of these
Jan 1, 2014
-
Heat Flow Studies In Longwall Faces In India
By M. L. Gupta, S. P. Banerjee, D. C. Panigrahi
The paper describes the computer simulation of climatic conditions in the longwall workings in India. For this simulation work the longwall panels have been divided into two segments, viz; the intake
Jan 1, 1993
-
Heat Generation and Climatic Control in the Operation of Tunnel Boring Machines
By S. J. Bluhm
INTRODUCTION Lesotho is a mountainous area of southern Africa from which water is to be exported in an extensive tunnel system, to industrial regions inland. The related tunnelling project has inv
Jan 1, 1997
-
Heat Load Estimation of Conveyed Ore in Underground Mines
By Jane Li, Kevin Tom
"Research has shown that broken rock on conveyor transport systems can contribute upwards of 50% towards the overall heat load in underground mines. However, few studies have made significant efforts
Jan 1, 2019
-
Heat Stress in Underground Mines and its Control Measures: A Systematic Literature Review and Retrospective Analysis
By Siddhartha Roy, Hemant Agrawal, Ram Madhab Bhattacharjee, Devi Prasad Mishra
Heat stress is a major concern for the health, safety and productivity of miners working in hot and humid underground mines. At greater depth, heat inside underground mines increases due to geothermal
Jan 14, 2022
-
Heat Transfer In Mine Airways With Natural Roughness
By M. McPherson, P. Mousset-Jones, G. Danko
Calculation of the sensible heat transfer between the rock surface and the flowing air in an underground airway is still fraught with problems. There are only a few results available in the literature
Jan 1, 1987
-
Heat-constrained modelling of calcium sulphate reduction
By L. A. Jordan, D. van Vuuren
A two-dimensional finite difference model has been developed to describe the reduction of kilogram quantities of dehydrated phosphogypsum. The model’s scope has been limited to focus on the heat trans
Oct 1, 2022