Bulletin 231 Mortality from Respiratory diseases in dustry trades

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 3032 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1918
Abstract
These extracts are sufficient for the purpose of emphasizing the
practical difficulties of averaging iron-mining conditions so as to
make general vital statistics concerning iron miners useful Tor scientific.
purposes. It is self-evident that conclusions based upon iron
miners, so called, working largely above ground and employed
chiefly in open-cut blasting ~perations or the management of steam
shovels, etc., can not be made to apply to miners working continuously
underground with an exposure of dust and other conditions
quite similar to underground mining methods in the extraction of
gold, silver, copper, lead, and other ores. The so-called "milling"
process as practiced on the Mesabi Range may here be referred to,
the same being explained in the report of the Immigration Commission
to consist "in the sinking of a shaft on the edge of the ore body
from which a tunnel is run in under the ore and connected with a
vertical, funnel-shaped hole from under the surface, through which
the ore is 'milled' down into the tramcars placed under the opening
under the tunnel. After being loaded at the bottom of the funnelshaped
hole, the cars are run out to the bottom 0.£ the shaft. where
the ore is dumped into skids or elevators and raised to the ~urface
and unloaded into the tipple, where it is loaded into thecal'S
ready for shipment." It is properly pointed out that the so-called
" milling" process employs some of the features of both the open-pit
and underground methods of mining. For these and many other
reasons it is self-evident that general statistics concerning iron
mining are quite likely to be inconclusive and possibly seriously
misleading.
Aside from the foregoing the problem is seriously complicated
by the extensive employment of foreign labor in the iron-mining
ind ustries of the Lake Superior districts and of Negro labor in iron
mining in Alabama. Within recent years, according to the report
of the Immigration Commission, a considerable displacement has
occurred in t~e quality of labor employed in iron mining, the displacement
bemg referred to as "progressive," in that one race or
group of races has entered the region and taken up the work
offered in the lower occupations, the race or races already holdinz
such positions having. moved up in the scale of occupation leaving
the field to the newcomers. This statement is quite suggestive in
that it indicates a comparatively short average trade life or trade
exposure, quite at variance with the relatively long average ascer-
MINES, QUARRIES, ORE REDUCTION, AND SMELTING. 377
tained for the iron mines of New <Tersey. It is said in the report
of the Immigration Commission that-
The Scandinavians and the other northern European races have
given way to the Finns and Slovenians, and in the open-pit mines
the Finns and Slovenians have given way to the south Italian,
Montenegrins, Croatins, and other southern European races. In the
underground mines the common labor and mining is chiefly done
bv Finns and Slovenians because the races from the southern countries
can not stand the heavy physical work required in this kind
of mining. Here, too, is found the same upward movement, for formerly
the English (Cornishmen) and Scandinavians' were in the
lower occupations in the underground properties, At present the
south Italians, Serbians, Montenegrins, and Croatians are performing
the most menial work and are the races who are now at the foot of
the scale of occupations. It is a matter of conjecture on the ranges
as to who will push these races up or whether they will remain the
commou laborers of the region.
Inquiry was made into the prevalence of diseases OIl the ranges,
but more with reference to outside sanitary conditions than to occupational
exposure. The most common diseases on the ranges, however,
were ascertained to be pulmonary tuberculosis and typhoid
fever, and to a lesser extent smallpox and venereal diseases. With
-cgard to pulmonary tuberculosis it is said that the disease is most
Eevalent among the Finns and the Swedes, and is chiefly imported,
I'here is no reference to a possible connection between disease occur-
~ence and occupational conditions, above or below ground, but there
.s no evidence that this aspect of the iron-mining industry was made
.he subject of a special investigation.
Citation
APA:
(1918) Bulletin 231 Mortality from Respiratory diseases in dustry tradesMLA: Bulletin 231 Mortality from Respiratory diseases in dustry trades. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1918.