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RI 5955 A Study Of Copper Reverberatory Slags From White Pine, Mich. ? SummaryBy L. M. Irwin
This Bureau of Mines investigation relates the physical properties of copper reverberatory furnace slags to changes in composition, The smelting of upper Michigan copper ore presents some problems tha
Jan 1, 1962
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OFR-144-84 Low-Profile Portable Crusher For Underground Mining Applications: Construction And TestingBy H. Miller
In recognition of the need for a portable low-profile hard rock crusher, the Bureau of Mines sponsored the development of such a unit capable of moving up as the face advances. By allowing primary ore
Jan 1, 1983
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OFR-61-81 The Impact Of Eliminating Safety Fuse From Metal/Nonmetal MinesBy Dipak Sengupta
This study analyzes the safety, technology, and economic impact of eliminating safety fuse from metal/nonmetal mines, based on operation and manufacturer experience over the past five to ten years. If
Jan 1, 1980
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OFR-146(3)-77 Comparative Coal Transportation Costs: An Economic And Engineering Analysis Of Truck, Belt, Rail, Barge And Coal Slurry And Pneumatic Pipelines ? Volume 3 ? Coal Slurry Pipelines ? 3.1 IntroductionBy Michael Rieber
An analysis of coal slurry pipelines was presented in our May 1976 study, Route Specific Cost Comparisons: Unit Trains, Coal Slurry Pipelines and Extra High Voltage Transmission (4]. The present study
Jan 1, 1977
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IC 6320 Milling Methods And Costs At The Concentrator Of The Chief Consolidated Mining Co., Eureka, Utah ? IntroductionBy G. H. Wigton
This paper, describing the concentrator practice of the Chief Consolidated Co., is one of a series being prepared by the United States Bureau of Mines. The concentrator adjoins the town of Eureka,
Jan 1, 1930
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IC 7012 Milling Methods And Costs Of The Cardinal Gold Mining Co., Bishop Creek, Calif. ? IntroductionBy Walter B. Lenhart
This paper is one of a series on milling methods and costs being. published by the Bureau of Mines. The milling practices and special problems relating to grinding, tailings disposal, and choice of a
Jan 1, 1938
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OFR-13-73 Mine Dust Surveys For Incombustible ContentBy Felix duBreuil
The present sampling procedure for evaluating the rock dusting conditions in a coal mine is time consuming. This study considers means by which this procedure could be simplified. Surveys were cond
Jan 1, 1972
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OFR-120(1)-79 Guidelines For Automatic Couplers - Volume I - Technical ReportBy Dipak C. Talapatra
This report describes the development of guidelines for design, inspection and maintenance of automatic couplers. In order to devise the guidelines, performance requirements for automatic couplers wer
Jan 1, 1977
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Methods Of Analyzing Coal And Coke - IntroductionBy A. C. Fieldner
THE Bureau of Mines has received many requests for Information concerning the methods its laboratories use for analyzing coal and coke and determining their heating value. The fuel investigations now
Jan 1, 1951
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OFR-45-84 Evaluation Of Surface Storage Facilities For Explosives, Blasting Agents And Other Explosive MaterialsBy J. Roth
The purpose of the present study is to increase the safety of explosive storage. This was accomplished by: a) review of the histories of recent and past magazine explosions to define causes and trends
Jan 1, 1983
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OFR-136-83 Technique For Determining Efficiency Of Sorbents In Diffusion-Type SamplersBy E. D. Palmes
Phase I of these studies demonstrated the feasibility of measuring the efficiency and capacity of sorbents in tube-type samplers for contaminant gases. This was accomplished by measuring concentration
Jan 1, 1983
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OFR-84-84 Development And Trials Of A Commercially Practice Roof Fall Warning SystemsBy James E. Aplin
Previous studies have shown that fracturing of roof strata precedes ultimate failure, and that the fracture development causes an accompanying increase in the apparent resistivity of the strata. Using
Jan 1, 1983
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RI 3464 Recent Research By The Bureau Of Mines On The Ignition Of Firedamp By Explosives ? IntroductionBy S. L. Gerhard
In the United States the performance characteristics of permissible explosives are controlled by routine tests, which include firing the explosive into a gallery filled with a methane-air mixture. The
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 8134 Laser Alinement Sensor for Continuous-Mining MachinesBy Merle L. Bowser
An alinement (steering) sensor for continuous mining machines has been developed under a Bureau of Mines contract. A laser source in the entry projects a beam parallel to the centerline of the entr
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 3499 Combustibility Of Coke In Air - A Laboratory Method (d5a15e2e-c358-4bca-9cb8-a0e9c836a677)By R. E. Zane
The Northwest Experiment Station of the Bureau of :,!in-s, in cooperation with the College of Mines, University of Washington, has completed a detailed investigation-of the physical and chemical prope
Jan 1, 1940
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OFR-108-77 The Effect Of Organizational Climate And Policy On Coal Mine SafetyBy Mark S. Sanders
The present study was designed to explore the contribution of organizational climate and management practices to the injury experience in underground coal mines. A cross-lagged panel design was used i
Jan 1, 1976
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OFR-32-75 Development Of A Simple, Rapid Analysis Method For Respirable Dust - Rapid Analysis Method For Respirable DustThe Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969 limits to 2 milligrams per cubic meter (for dust containing a maximum of 5% quartz) the average respirable dust concentration to which individual mi
Jan 1, 1974
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OFR-84(5)-76 A Master Environmental Control And Mine System Design Simulator For Underground Coal Mining - Volume V - Subsidence SubsystemBy C. B. Manula
This report is volume 5 of an eleven-volume final report for a Grant completed by The Pennsylvania State University for the Bureau of Mines to develop a dynamic general purpose computer simulation mod
Jan 1, 1974
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Recovery Of Tungsten From Searles Lake Brines By An Ion-Exchange ProcessBy P. B. Altringer
Searles Lake, CA, contains the largest known domestic tungsten resource. The brines in this near-dry lake bed, located in the Mojave Desert 130 mi northeast of Los Angeles, contain an estimated 135 MM
Jan 1, 1985
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RI 3464 Recent Research By The Bureau Of Mines On The Ignition Of Firedamp By Explosives ? Introduction (a0e9083d-edca-4006-8e7f-ec3b9f723e73)By S. L. Gerhard
In the United States the performance characteristics of permissible explosives are controlled by routine tests, which include firing the explosive into a gallery filled with a methane-air mixture. The
Jan 1, 1939