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Contribution of Shield Movement to Airborne Dust Levels in Longwall FacesBy R. V. Ramani, W. Miola, R. Srikanth, S. C. Soboleski
"Dust control in high-production longwalls requires attention to operating practices and ventilation schemes. Several studies have shown that the shearer is the major source of dust on a longwall face
Dec 1, 1996
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IC 9475 - Ergonomic Assessment Of Musculoskeletal Risk Factors At Four Mine Sites: Underground Coal, Surface Copper, Surface Phosphate, And Underground LimestoneBy Fred C. Turin, William J. Wiehagen
This study examined musculoskeletal injury risk at four mining sites: underground coal, underground limestone, surface copper, and surface phosphate. Each site offered opportunities to investigate m
Jan 8, 2004
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An Overview Of Standing Roof Support Practices And Developments In The United StatesBy T. M. Barczak
Many of the support concepts currently used in the United States originated in South Africa. These products include the Hercules Crib1, Propsetter, MX Prop, Rocprop, and Spider Prop. Another recent
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RI 8596 An Evaluation of Three Wet Dust Control Techniques for Face DrillsBy Steven J. Page
The increasing concern for dust control in metal and nonmetal mining prompted the Bureau of Mines to investigate the comparative effectiveness of three wet dust control techniques for face drilling. P
Jan 1, 1981
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RI 7492 Compositional Variations Of The Organic Material Of Green River Oil Shale-Colorado No. 1 CoreBy W. E. Robinson
Sixty samples, selected from a 2,300-foot core of the Green River Formation in Colorado, were studied to ascertain differences in the structure of the organic material present in the oil shale samples
Jan 1, 1971
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RI 3332 Survey of Fuel Consumption at Refineries in 1935By G. R. Hopkins
"A new record in fuel efficiency at petroleum refineries was achieved in 1935, when an average of only 615,000 B. t. u. was needed to refine a barrel of crude oil, compared with an average of 638,000
Jan 1, 1937
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RI 5475 Preparation Characteristics Of Coal From Washington County, Pa. ? SummaryBy T. E. Gray
This report describes the preparation characteristics of the more significant coal beds in Washington County, Pa. It is one of a series planned to determine coals suitable for producing metallurgical
Jan 1, 1959
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RI 3392 Resume Of Problems Relating To Edgewater Encroachment In Oil SandsBy F. G. Miller, H. C. Miller
Petroleum technologists and progressive operators constantly are striving to increase the percentage of oil that may to recovered from reservoir rocks through wells. The exhaustive studies that have b
Mar 1, 1938
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RI 3135 An Apparatus For The Determination Of Hydrogen Sulphide In GasesBy J. W. Horne
The United States Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the State of Colorado at the University of Colorado has conducted experiments to determine the amount and composition of the non-condensable gases
Jan 1, 1931
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RI 5906 Lightweight Aggregates: Expansion Properties Of Clays, Shales, And Precambrian Rocks Of Wisconsin ? SummaryBy W. A. Cole
This report covers the preliminary phase of an investigation of clays, shales, and certain rocks in Wisconsin to determine the feasibility of processing lightweight aggregate in the State. The study w
Jan 1, 1961
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IC 7698 Mining With A Dosco Continuous Miner On A Longwall Face ? IntroductionBy R. W. Stahl
One of the broad purposes of the Bureau of' Mines since its establishment has been conservation of mineral resources. As some of the coal beds approach depletion, especially those coals suitable
Jan 1, 1954
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RI 8065 Refining Molten Iron by Sulfide-Forming Slags and Chlorination - Removal of Copper, Tin, and Other ImpuritiesBy R. E. Brown
The objective of this Bureau of Mines study was a laboratory-scale evaluation of the sodium sulfate refining process for removing copper from molten ferrous scrap. Maximum copper removal is achieved i
Jan 1, 1975
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Multiple Seam Mining Interactions: Case Histories From The Harris No. 1 MineBy Phyllip Worley, Frank E. Chase, Christopher Mark
The Harris No. 1 Mine, located in Boone County, WV, has been longwalling the Eagle Coalbed for over 30 years. Harris has experienced numerous interactions associated with the extensive room-and-pilla
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Review Of Mining Technology (d9ed6922-bd78-4163-8f01-4380b1821f2f)By Clarence O. Babcock
ROCK BEHAVIOR has proved of national interest in a variety of fields. The behavior of rock consequent to a nuclear blast was used to detect such blasts, as criteria for the design of underground milit
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 8218 Arc Furnace Recycling of Chromium-Nickel From Stainless Steel WastesBy P. G. Barnard
Losses of alloying metals in furnace flue dusts, grinding swarfs, and mill scale produced during the manufacture of stainless steel are substantial. About 25 million lb Cr, 8.7 million lb Ni, and 150,
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 2488 Who May Set Off Blasts In Coal Mines? (State regulations relating thereto)By L. C. IlsLey
"According to accident statistics, issued from time to time by the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines covering fatalities in coal mines, between the years 1870 and 1921 there were 4,897 death
Jun 1, 1923
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RI 6016 A Preferential Stain For Beryl ? SummaryBy Sarkis G. Ampian
The Bureau of Mines has developed a method for identifying fine particles of beryl in mineral samples by preferentially staining the beryl grains. The sample is first subjected to a heated sodium hydr
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 9661 - Geophysical Methods to Detect Stress In Underground Mines (fbd9eada-6988-4464-972a-a896c5b1fd62)By John Jordan, Steven J. Knoll, Douglas Tesarik, Theodore J. Williams, David K. Denton, Douglas F. Scott
Highly stressed rock in stopes continues to be a primary safety risk for miners in underground mines because this condition can result in failures of ground that lead to both injuries and death. Perso
Jan 1, 2004
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Behavior Of Coal-Gas ReservoirsBy Joseph Cervik
Gas occurs in coalbeds in an adsorbed and a free gas state, Adsorbed gas is stored in the micropore structure and its transport is governed by Fick's law. The free gas occurs in the. fracture sys
Jan 1, 1969
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RI 2218 Explosion in High-Pressur Comptessed-Air LineBy E. D. Gardner
An explosion occurred in a high-pressure compressed-air line in October, 1930, at an Arizona copper mine. The explosion was unusual, and nothing had teor. noted by the plant operators to indicate the
Feb 1, 1921