Bulletin 137 The Use of Permissible Explosives in the Coal Mines of Illinois

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
JAMES R. FLEMING JOHN W. KOSTER
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
125
File Size:
3055 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1917

Abstract

The following report is made through the Bureau of Mines as a result of the work under the cooperative agreement with the State geological survey and the engineering experiment station of the University of Illinois. It deals with the use of permissible explosives in the coal mines of Illinois, and is intended primarily to present to mining men the possibility of assuring safer conditions in mining through the use of these explosives. Twenty coal mines in Illinois were using these relatively safe explosives at the time this report was prepared. Of these, seventeen were in Franklin County, two were in Saline County, and one in Montgomery County. In these various fields experience had shown that although black blasting powder was a useful agent in breaking down the coal at the working face, yet it had given such conclusive evidence of its danger to life and property in causing explosions and mine fires that a substitute was sought and has been found in permissible explosives. Each coal mine in Illinois in which permissible explosives are used was visited and a study made of the problems involved. The report deals briefly with the dangers of black blasting powder now in such common use in coal mining. It discusses the development of permissible explosives and their introduction into Illinois coal mines and points out the characteristic differences between permissible explosives and black blasting powder. The present system of blasting and the most approved methods of using permissible explosives are described. Data are given to show that not only has safety and efficiency in these mines been greatly improved, but that the cost of explosives to the miner per ton of coal has been reduced, and that sizes of coal produced from permissible explosives compare favorably with those previously obtained at the same mines with black blasting powder. The successful use of permissible explosives in these Illinois mines as well as in many other mines throughout the country should aid in their introduction into a larger number of mines and bring about that degree of freedom from explosions and fires which should be attained in mining.
Citation

APA: JAMES R. FLEMING JOHN W. KOSTER  (1917)  Bulletin 137 The Use of Permissible Explosives in the Coal Mines of Illinois

MLA: JAMES R. FLEMING JOHN W. KOSTER Bulletin 137 The Use of Permissible Explosives in the Coal Mines of Illinois. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1917.

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