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Annual Review – Mineral Industry Health and Safety, 1955By S. H. Ash
With statistics still incomplete, it appears that the safety record of the mineral industry for 1955 will do well to hold its own in comparison with 1954. On the one hand, metal mining shows an improv
Feb 1, 1956
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Contents (4bf2f0e7-162b-40ae-8de5-130ede18ff30)Jan 1, 1888
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Effect of Coal Breakage on Methane EmissionBy Fred N. Kissell, Maurice Deul
When coal is broken during mining, some of the methane trapped in the coal is released. Some recent investigations by the U.S. Bureau of Mines have shown that this methane released by breakage is only
Jan 1, 1975
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Bridgeport - October, 1894Jan 1, 1895
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Title PageJan 1, 1940
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What Is Wrong With Independent Mining?By Ira B. Joralemon
INDIVIDUALS and small companies have discovered and brought into production the mining districts of the United States. Hardly an exception comes to mind, save for the disseminated copper properties an
Jan 8, 1950
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MembershipJan 1, 1911
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Buffalo Paper - Note on the Possible Origin of the Pneumatic Process of Making SteelBy William B. Phillips
In connection with the address of our late President, Mr. Joseph D. Weeks, delivered at the Pittsburgh meeting, in February, 1896,* I venture to believe that a circumstance which came recently to my n
Jan 1, 1899
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Shortwall Mining - Potential And ProblemsBy Robert Stefanko
Shortwall mining represents a compromise between the room-and-pillar and longwall systems. Figure 1 shows that the shortwall layout is very similar to that for longwall panels, the primary difference
Jan 1, 1981
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New York Paper - The Safety of Underground Electrical InstallationsBy C. M. Means
Considering the hazard involved in mining operations, statistics show that a very small percentage of accidents is chargeable to electricity. These accidents do represent quite a large percentage of t
Jan 1, 1915
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Discussions - Of Mr. White's Paper on The Equipment of a Laboratory for Metallurgical Chemistry in a Technical School (see Trans., xxxv., 971)Charles H. White, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass, (communication to the Secretary*):—In answer to Mr. Jar-man's questions I am able to say that constant use (during term-time) since 1901 has
Jan 1, 1906
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An Amendment to Sales's Theory of Ore DepositionBy Frederick Bacorn
THE paper of Reno H.. Sales on Ore Deposits at Butte, Mont.,' is a careful and painstaking work, an important contribution to the literature of the subject. As is almost inevitable in a work of s
Jan 8, 1914
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Operations of the Chile Exploration Co., Chuquicamata, ChileBy W. D. MOTTER
THE following brief description of the status of operations of the Chile Exploration Co. at Chuquicamata, Chile; and of the plant as it exists today, points out the-great progress that has been made s
Jan 1, 1924
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Biographical Notices : Robert Bell ? H. J. CantwellDr. Robert Bell died on June 18, 1917, at Rathwell, Manitoba, in the seventy-seventh year of his age. He was born in Toronto on June 3, 1841, and was a son of the Reverend Andrew Bell of the Free Chur
Jan 11, 1917
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Biographical Notices - Hjalmar SjögrenThe cables brought the news last spring that the Institute had lost by death one of its most distinguished foreign members, Hjalmar Sjogren of Stockholm. For thirty-one years, Professor Sjogren had be
Jan 1, 1923
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Biographical Notices - Hjalmar SjögrenThe cables brought the news last spring that the Institute had lost by death one of its most distinguished foreign members, Hjalmar Sjogren of Stockholm. For thirty-one years, Professor Sjogren had be
Jan 1, 1923