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IC 7260 Supplementing Anthracite With Other Fuels For Home Heating - SummaryBy W. T. Reid
A shortage of anthracite for home heating indicates the necessity of using other fuels for this purpose; low-volatile bituminous, or "soft" coal is the most feasible supplementary fuel, either burned
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 7261 Recent Developments In Fuel Supply And DemandBy Arno C. Fieldner
Six years ago, I addressed the annual meeting of the American Society for Testing Materials on "Fuels of Today and Tomorrow."3/ Since then, our country has been drawn into another great war of veritab
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 7269 Marketing Magnesite And Allied Products ? IntroductionBy Charles L. Harness
Magnesia (MgO) has a variety of uses, and it has become increasingly important as a war material because of the imperative demand for refractories to line metallurgical furnaces, and because magnesia
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 7275 Accidents To Children From Blasting CapsBy D. Harrington
The prevention of accidents to children from blasting cans is of vital importance not only to everyone using commercial explosives but to the country at large. The manufacturers of explosives have rea
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7281 The Burning Rate Of Fuse - IntroductionBy D. Harrington
Educational campaigns conducted by the manufacturers of explosives, the Bureau of Mines, mining companies, and safety organizations have contributed greatly in reducing accidents caused by explosives
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7283 Permissible Mine Equipment Approved During 1943By E. J. Gleim
A list of permissible mine equipment, tested and approved by the Bureau of Mines previous to January 1, 1942, was published in Bureau of Mines Information Circular 7207.3/ The list of that date was co
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7284 Possible Hazards Attending The Use Of Engines Operated On Butane Fuel In Mining And Tunneling ? IntroductionBy L. B. Berger
From time to time the Bureau of Mines receives requests for information and advice regarding the safety of using internal-combustion engines operated on butane fuel as prime movers for haulage and oth
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7285 Geophysical Abstracts 116 January-March 1944 - 1. Gravitational Methods7253. Arkhangelsky, A. D. Geological Results of the General Magnetometric and Gravimetric Surveys of the U.S.S.R. (in Russian). Internat. Geol. Cong., Rep. of the 17th Sess., Moscow-Leningrad, 1937, v
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7286 Influence Of Humidity Upon The Resistivity Of Solid Dielectrics And Upon The Dissipation Of Static Electricity ? SummaryBy E. M. Cohn
The literature dealing with the electrical conductivity of solid dielectrics, including all its aspects and its relationships to other physical properties of these materials, is extensive and scattere
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7287 Hazards From Common Gases And Vapors Encountered At Surface Disasters ? IntroductionBy G. W. Jones
One of the major activities of the Bureau of Mines is the promotion of safety in mining and other industries, In this connection, the Bureau determines the explosion hazards' of combustible gases
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7289 Suggested Hoisting-Signal Code For Metal-Mine ShaftsBy D. Harrington
A uniform hoisting-signal code for mines hoisting from more than one level, if adopted by all mining States, would be beneficial to employees and owners alike and should largely reduce the number of h
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7290 Testing Safety Catches On Mine Cages At Some Eastern Bituminous Coal Mines ? IntroductionBy H. J. Sloman
Mining laws of the several coal-producing Stat e with respect to safety catches on mine cages and their testing are extremely variable and generally indefinite in scope. The most specific requirements
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7291 Suggested Hoisting-Signal Code For Slope Coal Mines And For Shaft Mines Having Only One Level ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
The code of hoisting signals for use in mines hoisting from one level, as suggested in this publication, is submitted to induce consideration of this subject by representative groups of the coal-minin
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7292 Geophysical Abstracts 117 April - June 1944 ? ForewordGeophysical Abstracts 1 - 86 were issued in mimeographed form by the Bureau of Mines; Abstracts 87 - 111 were published in bulletins of the Geological Survey; Abstracts 112 - 116 were issued in mimeog
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7293 Mining And Milling Operations Of The Rutile Mine Of The Titanium Alloy Co. Of Arkansas Hot Spring County, Ark. ? SummaryBy Felix A. Vogel
Rutile concentrate, used in the manufacture of welding rode, smoke-screen chemicals, and alloys, is being produced by the Titanium Alloy Co. of Arkansas at its mine and. mill in Magnet Cove. The compa
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7294 Prospect Trenching With Caterpillar-Mounted AngledozersBy S. H. Lorain
Mechanized dirt-moving equipment has greatly increased the scope of prospect trenching by lowering the costs and increasing the speed of such work. Where the soil covering was more than 3 or 4 feet de
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7295 Corundum ? Composition And PropertiesBy Robert W. Metcalf
Corundum, natural alumina, or aluminum oxide (A1203) is the hardest mineral known except diamond. Theoretical composition is Al 52.9 percent and 0 17.1 percent, but it always contains small quantities
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7300 Milling And Smelting Operations Of The Magma Copper Co., Superior, Ariz. ? IntroductionBy Edward J. Caldwell
In 1930 the Bureau of Mines published a description3/ f the concentrating process of the Magma Copper Co. as it had been developed to that time and was then employed. The prevent paper revises the des
Jan 1, 1944
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IC 7307 Surface Storage Of Explosives ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
Although for many years considerable attention has been given to devising safe and efficient methods of using explosives, with some success, relatively little has been done to provide satisfactory sto
Jan 1, 1945
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IC 7309 Industrial-Dust ExplosionsBy Hylton R. Brown
Advertisements and articles in technical and trade journals announce the approach of a new age, in which plastics, light metals, laminated wood, and numerous other products or byproducts will be used
Jan 1, 1945