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IC 6741 Mining Methods And Costs At The McIntyre Porcupine Mines, Ltd., Schumacher, Ontario - IntroductionBy H. G. Skavlem
This paper is prepared the United States Bureau of Mines and is descriptive of methods, practice, and costs at the McIntyre Porcupine Mines, Ltd., Schumacher, Ontario. The property is located in the
Jan 1, 1933
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OFR-2-80 Development Of New Design Concepts For Construction Of Valley FillsBy LeRoy D. Loy
The disposal of excess overburden from surface mining can be accomplished by use of a reclamation technique entitled head-of-hollow or valley fill. This report attempts to assess current valley fill r
Jan 1, 1978
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OFR-76-81 Data Security For In-Mine Transmission Final Report - Part 1By Jon G. Bredeson
A survey of electromagnetic noise reports was performed and a summary of the results are given. Industrial concerns were surveyed for techniques to minimize the effects of electromagnetic noise and ar
Jan 1, 1981
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RI 6509 Expendable Casting Molds For Reactive MetalBy R. A. Beall, S. L. Ausmus
The development of a completely water - free expendable graphite mold material , useful for reactive metal castings , has been detailed . Mixing and curing variables have been evaluated both by physic
Jan 1, 1964
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RI 9378 - Thermal Models of a Flame ArresterBy John C. Edwards
To increase the capability to predict the effectiveness of a flame arrester in the cooling of hot combustion gases expelled through a flame arrester, the U.S. Bureau of Mines developed an equilibrium.
Jan 1, 2010
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IC 6345 What the Superintendent of a Coal Mine Might Do to Prevent Injury from Falls of RoofBy J. W. Paul
A superintendent is one who has the oversight and charge of some organiza- tion or enterprise, with porer of direction. The superintendent of a coal mine is the official who is in general charge of co
Sep 1, 1930
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RI 3537 Annual Report Of The Explosives Division, Fiscal Year 1940 ? IntroductionBy Wilbert J. Huff
[This is the fifth of a series of annual reports of the explosives Division, Bureau of Mines, United States Department of the Interior.3/ It deals particularly with work done during the period July 1,
Jan 1, 1940
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RI 3264 Smelting In The Lead Blast Furnace Handling Zinciferous Charges. XV.-Slags From The Trail Blast FurnacesBy G. L. Oldright
The past reputation of zinc as an ingredient in lead blast furnace slags has been bad. Zinc is thought of as a cause of accretions in the shaft of the blast furnace, of hot tops, of the formation of "
Jan 1, 1934
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RI 6275 The Hydrocyclone In Clay BeneficiationBy H. E. Powell
This study was made to determine the capabilities and limitations of the hydrocyclone for separating quartz sand from impure clays, Optimum operating conditions for beneficiating typical subgrade clay
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 5532 Nickel-Cobalt-Iron-Bearing Deposits In Puerto Rico ? Introduction And SummaryBy W. L. Heidenreich
This report describes the methods and results of field investigations conducted by the Bureau of Mines between December 1956 and December 1957 on seven deposits of nickel-cobalt-iron-bearing laterite
Jan 1, 1959
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RI 6325 Feasibility of Electrical Precipitation at High Temperatures and PressuresBy J. H. Holden, C. C. Shale, G. R. Strimbeck, W. S. Bowie
Electrical characteristics are presented for air in a 2 - inch pipe - type electrostatic precipitator operating under dynamic conditions at temperatures of 600 ° to 1,500 ° F and pressures of 0 to 80
Jan 1, 1963
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IC 9044 Molybdenum Availability - Market Economy Countries - A Minerals Availability AppraisalBy C. M. Palencia
The Bureau of Mines evaluated the potential availability of molybdenum resources from 88 mines and deposits that account for more than 90 pct of the demonstrated resource base in market economy countr
Jan 1, 1985
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RI 5462 Operations Of Manganese-Ore-Purchasing Depots At Deming, N. Mex., And Wenden, Ariz. ? SummaryBy W. W. Agey
Under terms of cooperative agreements, the Federal Bureau of Mines Inter-mountain Experiment Station assisted the General Services Administration (GSA) in operating the manganese-ore purchasing depots
Jan 1, 1959
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OFR-123(4)-78 Advancement Of Mine Ventilation Network Analysis From Art To Science - Volume IV Sensitivity Of Leakage And Friction FactorsBy R. V. Ramani
In this the available information friction factors and leakage report, on characteristics are reviewed and summarized. The use of Penn State Mine Ventilation Simulator (Volumes II and III of the Final
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 8431 Electrochemical Corrosion Behavior of Alloys Formed by Ion ImplantationBy B. S. Covino
The Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of the Interior, is conducting research to devise substitute corrosion-resistant materials by using ion implantation to form alloyed regions near the surfaces of m
Jan 1, 1980
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IC 8473 Lithologic Descriptions of Appalachian Area Oil-Producing FormationsBy R. L. Rough, W. K. Overbey
The Bureau of Mines obtained samples of oil - reservoir rock from wells in Ohio , Pennsylvania , and West Virginia as part of an investigation of the susceptibility of petroleum reservoirs to secondar
Jun 1, 1970
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IC 8946 Selected Raw Material Requirements For Japan's Specialty Steel IndustryBy E. Chin
Although Japan is a major producer of crude steel, it is poor in industrial raw materials. This Bureau of fines report describes Japan's raw material needs for chromium, cobalt, manganese, nickel
Jan 1, 1983
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RI 5417 Synthetic Asbestos Investigations: Synthesis Of Fluoramphiboles From Melts ? SummaryBy H. R. Shell
To obtain a better understanding of the crystallization of fluoride containing amphiboles from melts, an investigation of the range of stability between fluoramphi-boles and other minerals was conduct
Jan 1, 1958
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IC 9253 Review Of Single-Entry Longwall Mining Technology In The United StatesBy F. M. Jenkins
Longwall mining systems are used to mine approximately 50 pet of the world's total underground coal production. Single entries are the predominant method of longwall development in Europe and Asi
Jan 1, 1990
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IC 7463 Ammonium Nitrate- Its properties and Fire and Explosion Hazards (a RevIew WIth Bibliography)By G. S. Scott. R. L. Grant
Ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3), a white crystalline chemical compound composed of 35 percent nitrogen, 60 percent oxygen, and 5 percent hydrogen, has again attracted attention, due largely to the recent ca
Jun 1, 1948