Bulletin 132 Siliceous Dust in Relation to Pulmonary Disease Among Miners in the Joplin District, Missouri

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 137
- File Size:
- 3700 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1917
Abstract
Under its organic act the Federal Bureau of Mines is directed to
conduct investigations relating to the improvement of health conditions
in the mineral industries. This report describes the lead and
zino deposits and the mining methods employed in the sheet-ground
area of the Joplin district, Missouri, and discusses the causes and the
methods of abating rock dust in the mines, the chemical and physical
characteristics of the dust, and the quantities present in mine air.
Although the preliminary investigation included a number of the
"soft-ground" mines, the writer spent the larger part of his time in
the sheet-ground mines, for in them alone was siliceous dust found in
appreciable quantities. Some results of the preliminary investigation
have been published by the Bureau of Mines in Technical
Paper 105.a
The territory covered in t~lCpreliminary investigation, during the
period between November 7 and December 6, 1914, embraced parts of
Jasper, Lawrence, Newton, and Greene Counties, Mo., and outlying
districts in Kansas and Oklahoma. The remainder of the field work,
to which 84 days during the period from February 9 to July 19, 1915,
were devoted, was confined to the sheet-ground mines, the most
important of which are situated in the vicinity of Joplin, Webb City,
Carterville, and other smaller near-by towns in Jasper County, Mo.
Citation
APA:
(1917) Bulletin 132 Siliceous Dust in Relation to Pulmonary Disease Among Miners in the Joplin District, MissouriMLA: Bulletin 132 Siliceous Dust in Relation to Pulmonary Disease Among Miners in the Joplin District, Missouri. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1917.