RI 3840 Washability Characteristics and Washing of Coals from the Matanuska Field of Alaska

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
M. R. Geer H. F. Yancey
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
24
File Size:
1138 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1946

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION With the advent of war in 1941, military operations in Alaska were enlarged on such a scale that the demand for coal in the Territory more than doubled. Coal was needed urgently for heating forts and other military establishments, for use on large construction projects, and for handling the greatly increased volume of traffic on the Alaska Railroad. -The additional tonnage required, estimated at perhaps 250,000 tons per year, probably could have been supplied by the United States, but shipping space between Pacific Coast ports and Alaska was already overburdened with military supplies and construction materials. Moreover, although of only secondary importance in wartime, the cost of coal shipped into the Territory is reported to have been as high as $40 per ton. The alternative to importing coal was, of course, to increase the Production of the Alaska mines.Production of coal in Alaska reached, 350,000 tons in 1944, or more than double the prewar' output. The responsibility for increasing coal production was assumed largely by the Army, A Coal Commission attached to the Alaska Department arranged financial assistance for some mining operations, aided the operators in producing equipment for mechanization, and provided most of the labor necessary to operate the mines. The Bureau of Mines contributed to the program in several ways. First, exploration by the Bureau in the Moose Creek district revealed a substantial tonnage of coal of better grade than any currently mined in the Territory, 4/ and drilling in the Broad Pass district, where a mine to supply coal for the army had been started, revealed that the reserves were far less than had been supposed; this operation was abandoned. Second, coal-preparation practices were studied, and recommendations for improvements made, at two of the operating mines at which the quality of the coal makes preparation a factor of vital importance. Some of the information obtained in these studies forms the basis for the present report."
Citation

APA: M. R. Geer H. F. Yancey  (1946)  RI 3840 Washability Characteristics and Washing of Coals from the Matanuska Field of Alaska

MLA: M. R. Geer H. F. Yancey RI 3840 Washability Characteristics and Washing of Coals from the Matanuska Field of Alaska. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1946.

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