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RI 5843 Agglomerating Anthracite For Metallurgical Fuel ? SummaryBy W. S. Sanner
Anthracite was used extensively as a fuel in iron metallurgy from 1840 to 1880. In 1874, 226 of the 680 blast furnaces in the United States were operating on anthracite and producing almost one-half o
Jan 1, 1961
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IC 7259 Accidents Due To Misuse Of ExplosivesBy D. Harrington
Misuse of explosives and heedless disregard of well-known safety rules covering the use of commercial explosives cause many avoidable accidents resulting in the death or maiming of men who can ill be
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 6895 Explosions of coal dust in tipples and cleaning plants and some suggestions on preventing themBy W. J. Pena, C. W. Owings
"Generally, the hazard of cool-dust explosions in tipples and cleaning plants is not given the consideration that is given it underground. This lack of consideration is probably due to failure to appr
Jul 1, 1936
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Addressing the Safety of Programmable Electronic Mining Systems: Lessons LearnedBy John J. Sammarco
The functional safety of programmable electronic (PE) mining systems is an international issue and concern. From 1995 to 2001, 11 PE-related mining incidents in the U.S. were reported by the Mine Safe
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OFR-45-92 Hydrometallurgical Recovery Of Lead From Blast Furnace Slags - Background And ObjectivesBy Mandeep Singh
The smelting of lead ores has been carried out in southeast Missouri for centuries, and modern smelting practices have generated a variety of waste products. Lead blast furnace slag is one such produc
Jan 1, 1992
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RI 8473 - Face Ventilation Measurement with Sulfur Hexafluoride (SF6)By Robert P. Vinson, John C. LaScola, Fred N. Kissell, Edward D. Thimon
The face ventilation measurement method developed by the Bureau of Mines involves releasing a small volume of tracer gas (SF6) on the off-curtain side of the working face at the start of the mining cy
Jan 1, 1980
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Oxygen Effects on Free Radicals and Cytotoxicity of Freshly Crushed CoalBy N. S. Dalal, B. Jafarl, M. M. Suryan, V. Vallyathan
"The biologic events leading to coal workers' pneumoconiosis (C'WP) are not yet fully understood. There is no good correlation between toxicity studies or animal models with human epidemiologic and pa
Jan 1, 1989
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IC 8964 Ground Penetrating Radar - A Review Of Its Application In The Mining IndustryBy W. E. Pittman
The Bureau of Mines, as part of its Health and Safety Technology Program, is conducting research on the use of ground penetrating radar (GPR) for mine hazard detection. GPR offers a possibility of map
Jan 1, 1984
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Lifting In Stooped And Kneeling Postures: Effects On Lifting Capacity, Metabolic Costs, And Electromyography Of Eight Trunk MusclesBy Sean Gallagher, Thomas G. Bobick, William S. Marras
Twelve healthy, experienced underground cool miners performed lifting capacity tests in stooped and kneeling postures using a modified psychophysical procedure. Subjects adjusted weight in a lifting b
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IC 7231 Tentative Inspection Standards For Anthracite Mines ? IntroductionThese tentative inspection standards have been prepared as a guide for the Federal inspection of the anthracite mines of the United States. The Federal Coal Mine Inspection Division is not a mining-la
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 8249 Active List Of Permissible Explosives And Blasting Devices Approved Before Jan. 1, 1965By N. E. Hanna
The current Bureau of Mines active list of permissible explosives includes 124 brands. Thirteen are gelatinous and the rest are the more commonly used granular ammonium nitrate type. The list of permi
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 2282 Hot High-Nitrogen Gas In A Metal MineBy G. E. McElroy
"while investigating the presence of heavy strata gases* in certain mines of the East Tintic mining district of Utah, a small, local body of light, very hot gas of high-nitrogen composition was noted
Sep 1, 1921
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IC 9362 Overview Of Mine Subsidence Insurance Programs In The United StatesBy David K. Ingram
Research performed by the U.S. insurance industry has determined that mine subsidence is uninsurable. Consequently, the insurance industry has decided not to voluntarily offer mine subsidence insuranc
Jan 1, 1993
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Stability Of Underground Openings Adjacent To The Sink Hole At The NIOSH Lake Lynn Research LaboratoryBy T. E. Marshall, D. R. Dolinar, T. M. Barczak, T. P. Mucho
Over a portion of the older limestone mine workings at the NIOSH Lake Lynn Laboratory, a mining health and safety research facility, a large sinkhole formed caused in part by the intersection of sever
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RI 3765 Ore-Testing Studies on Gold & Silver DepositsBy J. A. Woolf, A. P. Towne
"INTRODUCTION A considerable part of the metallurgical work of the Precious Metals Section comprises ore-testing experiments on ores selected as representative of various mining districts on areas. Pr
Aug 1, 1944
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RI 3408 Cooperative Fuel Research Motor-Gasoline Survey, Winter 1937-38 ? Introduction[~lis is the f'fth in a ~erieG of reports on properties of commercial motor fuels, made in accordance 1,'Vi t:h fl cooperative ae,ree-ment betwGon tho Cooperative Fuel ReRRarch (e.F.R.) Comm
Jan 1, 1938
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MLA 7-94 - The Potential For Undiscovered Mineral Resources In The Absaroka-Beartooth Study Area (Part Of The Custer And Gallatin National Forests, Montana)By Len Blackman
The Absaroka-Beartooth Study Area is a tract of approximately 1.4 million acres of National forest land in southern Montana, part of the Greater Yellowstone Area. This study evaluated the mineral pote
Jan 1, 1994
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RI 5227 Changes Induced In Low-Temperature Tar By Oxidation And Storage ? Summary And ConclusionsBy Manuel Gomez
Primary, low-temperature tars are generally known to alter with time. The effect is believed to occur, in some instances, without the external influence of air, light, or heat. Since one of the proces
Jan 1, 1956
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Reducing Roof Fall Accidents on Retreat Mining SectionsBy Joseph C. Zelanko, Christopher Mark
During August, two eastern Kentucky coal miners died in a roof fall during retreat mining operations. They had just finished extracting one pillar block and were moving to the next one when the inters
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RI 3315 Washability Studies of Coal From Henry Ellen Bed at Acmar No. 5 Mine Acmar, ALA.By B. W. Gandrud, G. D. Coe
"INTRODUCTION The Southern Experiment Station of the U.S. Bureau of Mines, cooperating with the University of Alabama and Alabama coal producers, has made a series of investigations of the washability
Nov 1, 1936