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IC 7290 Testing Safety Catches On Mine Cages At Some Eastern Bituminous Coal Mines ? Introduction
By H. J. Sloman
Mining laws of the several coal-producing Stat e with respect to safety catches on mine cages and their testing are extremely variable and generally indefinite in scope. The most specific requirements
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7291 Suggested Hoisting-Signal Code For Slope Coal Mines And For Shaft Mines Having Only One Level ? Introduction
By D. Harrington
The code of hoisting signals for use in mines hoisting from one level, as suggested in this publication, is submitted to induce consideration of this subject by representative groups of the coal-minin
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7292 Geophysical Abstracts 117 April - June 1944 ? Foreword
Geophysical Abstracts 1 - 86 were issued in mimeographed form by the Bureau of Mines; Abstracts 87 - 111 were published in bulletins of the Geological Survey; Abstracts 112 - 116 were issued in mimeog
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7293 Mining And Milling Operations Of The Rutile Mine Of The Titanium Alloy Co. Of Arkansas Hot Spring County, Ark. ? Summary
By Felix A. Vogel
Rutile concentrate, used in the manufacture of welding rode, smoke-screen chemicals, and alloys, is being produced by the Titanium Alloy Co. of Arkansas at its mine and. mill in Magnet Cove. The compa
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7294 Prospect Trenching With Caterpillar-Mounted Angledozers
By S. H. Lorain
Mechanized dirt-moving equipment has greatly increased the scope of prospect trenching by lowering the costs and increasing the speed of such work. Where the soil covering was more than 3 or 4 feet de
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7295 Corundum ? Composition And Properties
By Robert W. Metcalf
Corundum, natural alumina, or aluminum oxide (A1203) is the hardest mineral known except diamond. Theoretical composition is Al 52.9 percent and 0 17.1 percent, but it always contains small quantities
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7296 Blasting Hazards In Strip Mines Adjacent To Underground Workings
By J. J. Forbes
The rapid increase in the quantity of coal being mined by stripping methods is one reason for the increased interest evinced by safety and other agencies in the hazards that are inherent in this Metho
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7297 Control Of Silicosis Hazard By Substitution Of Quartz-Free Or Low-Quartz Material For Sand Used Under Mine Locomotives ? Introduction
By Carlton E. Brown
Sand, which is used widely under the wheels of mine locomotives to prevent slipping, is an important source of silica dust breathed by some employees of certain mines, such as those having appreciable
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7298 Some Of The Hazards Of Auxiliary Fans In Coal Mines ? Introduction
By D. Harrington
Most of those in the Health and Safety Branch, Bureau of Mines, necessarily participate in activities associated with essentially all phases of the mineral industries, including coal and noncoal mines
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7299 Bureau Of Mines Exploration Of Mercury Deposits To June 30, 1944 ? Summary
By McHenry Mosier
Mercury is one of the strategic metals the supply of which has been raised from critical uncertainty to more than enough for essential demands. Work by the Bureau of Mines has contributes substantiall
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7300 Milling And Smelting Operations Of The Magma Copper Co., Superior, Ariz. ? Introduction
By Edward J. Caldwell
In 1930 the Bureau of Mines published a description3/ f the concentrating process of the Magma Copper Co. as it had been developed to that time and was then employed. The prevent paper revises the des
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7301 Fuel For Permissible Flame Safety Lamps (A Revision Of R.I. 3389) - Introduction
By A. B. Hooker
Investigations at the Pittsburgh Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines have shown that satisfactory operation of a flame safety lamp depends not only upon proper design and assembly of the lamp bu
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7302 Prevention Of Fires Caused By Electric Arcs And Sparks From Trolley Wires ? Introduction
By F. E. Griffith
[Unquestionably mine fires new constitute one of the chief causes of sabotaging the effort to produce maximum quantities of mineral products essential to the prosecution of the war. This applies more
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7304 Bibliography Of Bureau Of Mines Investigations On The Production Of Liquid Fuels From Oil Shale, Coal, Lignite, And Natural Gas ? Introduction
By Arno C. Fieldner
In view of the widespread interest in the production of synthetic liquid fuels from solid and gaseous fuels to supplement declining reserves of petroleum, and the many requests that are now being rece
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7305 Successful Method For Signaling From Mine Cages At Rest Or In Motion
By Carl Belser
In 1925 the Park Utah Consolidated Mines Co., after several years of experimental work, installed a system for signalling from cages which has been operating efficiently and with low upkeep costs for
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7307 Surface Storage Of Explosives ? Introduction
By D. Harrington
Although for many years considerable attention has been given to devising safe and efficient methods of using explosives, with some success, relatively little has been done to provide satisfactory sto
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7308 Shaft Sinking By Stripping Churn-Drill Holes ? Introduction
By W. A. Cole
As the mines get older and the active workings get Farther and farther away from the original mine openings, it becomes increasingly difficult and expensive to ventilate most coal-mines properly. At t
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7309 Industrial-Dust Explosions
By Hylton R. Brown
Advertisements and articles in technical and trade journals announce the approach of a new age, in which plastics, light metals, laminated wood, and numerous other products or byproducts will be used
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7311 The Hazard Of Hydrogen Fluoride Poisoning In The Mineral And Allied Industries ? Introduction
By R. R. Sayers
The increasing use of hydrogen fluoride (annual consumption now exceeds 500,000 pounds (1)4/) directly and its occurrence as a byproduct of the utilization of fluorine compounds in the mineral industr
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7312 Trends In Exploration Of Mineral Deposits
By Lowell B. Moon
Regardless of how a mineral deposit in first discovered or by whom, any mining enterprise based upon it must pass through a preliminary stage of exploration. The common understanding of ?exploration?
Jan 1, 1945