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IC 6870 Coal-Mine Explosions And Fires In The United States During The Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1935 ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
The experience of the past 2 years has demonstrated clearly that mine explosions with heavy loss of life can be prevented. The investigations of the Safety Division of the United States Bureau of Mine
Jan 1, 1936
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RI 8537 Wear Properties of Electrodeposited Titanium Diboride CoatingsBy D. R. Flinn
A newly developed chemical conditioning technique, which greatly simplifies the preparation of plating baths for the electrodeposition of titanium diboride (TiB2) coatings, is described in this report
Jan 1, 1981
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Using Ultrasonic Anemometers to Evaluate Factors Affecting Face Ventilation EffectivenessBy T. Mal
A test system was developed at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health's ventilation test gallery for measuring airflow using a three-axis ultrasonic anemometer. The gallery war
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The Critical Ventilation Velocity In Tunnel Fires - A Computer SimulationBy J. C. Edwards, C. C. Hwang
In ventilated tunnel fires, smoke and hot combustion products may form a layer near the ceiling and flow in the direction opposite to the ventilation stream. The existence of this reverse stratified f
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RI 6086 Analyses Of Tipple And Delivered Samples Of Coal (Collected During The Fiscal Year 1961) ? IntroductionBy S. J. Aresco
The Bureau of Mines has been active in promoting the purchase of coal for Government use under specifications that define the requirements in terms of heating value of the coal, expressed in British t
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 6044 Use Of Various Salts As Copper-Volatilizing Agents In The Segregation Process ? SummaryBy W. A. McKinney
The segregation process consists of heating crushed oxidized or mixed oxide-sulfide copper are with a copper-volatilizing salt and carbonaceous material at about 750° C. to produce metallic copper whi
Jan 1, 1962
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Evaluation Of Devices To Prevent Construction Equipment Backing IncidentsBy Todd M. Ruff
Blind areas around construction equipment are a major contributing factor in incidents involving a piece of equipment striking a worker. In highway construction, these types of incidents result in an
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IC 6383 Mining Bituminous Coal By Stripping Methods - I. Economic Analysis - IntroductionBy Scott Turner
The present rapid growth of coal stripping in the United States is a curious reversal of the tendency of mining to proceed from outcrop to depth. A combination of technical and economic factors bas st
Jan 1, 1930
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IC 6869 Asbestos - Milling, Marketing, And Fabrication ? IntroductionBy Oliver Bowles
This paper is the third of a series of reports on asbestos prepared by the Bureau of Mines. The reports already issued contain general information, including descriptions of deposits throughout the wo
Jan 1, 1935
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Considerations For Using Roof Monitors In Underground Limestone Mines In The USABy Stephen C. Tadolini, Thomas E. Marshall, Cecil Banta, L. J. Prosser, Anthony T. Iannacchione
The Pittsburgh Research Laboratory of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) endeavors to provide national and world leadership in the prevention of work-related illness, in
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RI 7624 A Thousand-Ton Capacity Stiff Testing MachineBy F. G. Horino
This report presents the theory and design of a stiff loading machine used by the Bureau of Mines. The machine incorporates three high-strength steel columns as the restraining member in parallel with
Jan 1, 1972
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OFR-7-74 Applicability Of Speech Bandwidth Compression Techniques In Mine Electromagnetic CommunicationsBy C. H. Manney
This report deals with the feasibility of the use of vocoders as an integral part of a mine electromagnetic voice communication system. Limitations imposed by the nature of the transmission path, back
Jan 1, 1972
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RI 7473 Processing Manganiferous Sea NodulesBy P. T. Brooks
Mineral nodules from the ocean floor represent a vast potential source of manganese, nickel, cobalt, and copper. Process development studies to devise methods for recovering these metals were conducte
Jan 1, 1971
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IC 6863 Falls Of Coal And Rock On Man-Trips In Bituminous-Coal Mines ? IntroductionBy C. W. Owings
A few of the more progressive mining companies have taken precautions to safeguard employees or man-trips. Specially constructed men-cars -have been provided with special devices or mechanisms to stop
Jan 1, 1935
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IC 8312 Sulfur Content Of United States Coals ? IntroductionBy Joseph A. DeCarlo
Coal is one of our basic sources of energy (heat, power, light) and an essential raw material for most metallurgical processing. More than two-thirds of the electricity currently produced by thermal p
Jan 1, 1966
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IC 8312 Sulfur Content Of United States Coals ? Introduction (594562e6-73ac-400b-a221-cee998b4a6aa)By Joseph A. DeCarlo
Coal is one of our basic sources of energy (heat, power, light) and an essential raw material for most metallurgical processing. More than two-thirds of the electricity currently produced by thermal p
Jan 1, 1966
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Computational Fluid Dynamics Modeling Of Spontaneous Heating In Longwall Gob AreasBy L. Yuan, A. C. Smith
To provide insights for the optimization of ventilation systems for U.S. underground coal mines facing both methane control and spontaneous combustion issues, a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) stud
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RI 3468 Chemical Considerations Relating To Fires In Anthracite Refuse ? Introduction (1067f50f-d311-4814-b182-e930b23927c4)By G. W. Jones
Fires in anthracite refuse banks are troublesome and may become exceedingly costly to combat. Instances are known in which refuse-bank fires have grown to such magnitude that entire mining properties
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 3573 Use Of Brine In A Kansas Field For Secondary Recovery Of Oil ? Introduction (841ee18f-f5bf-442b-b3bf-b68defa58be5)By C. J. Wilhelm
Brine produced from subsurface formations may be employed successfully instead of fresh water as a flooding, medium in the secondary recovery of oil. The feasibility of this substitution has been prov
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 6115 Thermal Expansion Of Magnesium Oxide: An Interlaboratory StudyBy William J. Campbell
Evaluation by the Bureau of Mines of published expansion values for magnesium oxide shows significant variation in values, which may be attributed to sample variables, experimental errors, or systemat
Jan 1, 1962