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Employment And Injuries In The Metal And Nonmetal Industries (58fc3dbe-5b2b-45ce-9d71-7c1d0c924625)By Forrest T. Moyer
INJURY experience and employment data are presented in this chapter for metal and nonmetal mines, stone quarries, sand and gravel pits, iron blast-furnace slag plants, and metallurgical plants (includ
Jan 1, 1963
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OFR-23(1)-77 Comparison Of Uniform Four-Foot Length, Fully-Grouted Resin Roofbolts And Alternating Four-And Six-Foot Length, Fully-Grouted Resin Roofbolts ? 1.0 Summary And ConclusionsBy Joe Maher
Adequate mine roof support to insure the safety of men and equipment is essential to successful mining. It is also expensive, amounting to more than one-fifth of the total mining cost at the White Pin
Jan 1, 1975
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RI 4932 Preliminary Report: Nonmetallic Deposits Accessible To The Alaska Railroad As Possible Sources Of Raw Materials For The Construction Industry ? SummaryBy F. A. Rutledge
[An a part of the United States Department of the interior program for the development and use of Alaska raw materials, the Bureau of Mines is conducting an investigation of deposits of nonmetallic mi
Jan 1, 1953
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Noncoal Contractor Mining Facts – 2004The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) defines an independent contractor as “any person, partnership, corporation, subsidiary of a cor-poration, firm, association or other organization that
Sep 1, 2007
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Coal Contractor Mining Facts - 2005The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) defines an independent contractor as any person, partnership, corporation, subsidiary of a corporation, firm, association or other organization that co
Jan 1, 2008
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RI 5225 Fundamental Flashback, Blowoff, And Yellow-Tip Limits Of Fuel Gas-Air Mixtures ? Introduction And SummaryBy Joseph Grumer
About a century ago Bunsen and his associates invented the famous burner that bears his name and was to become the ancestor of today's gas appliances. Over the years, Bunsen's invention beca
Jan 1, 1956
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Coal Contractor Mining Facts ? 2006The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) defines an independent contractor as any person, partnership, corporation, subsidiary of a corporation, firm, association or other organization that co
Jan 1, 2008
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RI 6001 Low-Temperature Heat Capacity And Entropy At 298.15° K. Of Red Mercuric Sulfide ? Introduction And SummaryBy E. G. King
Heat of formation values for mercuric sulfide appear in all the comprehensive listings of thermodynamic data, but experimentally determined entropy values have been lacking. Consequently, all free ene
Jan 1, 1962
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Bulletin 132 Siliceous Dust in Relation to Pulmonary Disease Among Miners in the Joplin District, MissouriBy George S. Rice, F. B. LANEY, A. J. Lanza, Edwin Higgins
Under its organic act the Federal Bureau of Mines is directed to conduct investigations relating to the improvement of health conditions in the mineral industries. This report describes the lead and z
Jan 1, 1917
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IC 8866 Ergonomics-Human Factors in Mining - Proceedings: Bureau of Mines Technology Transfer Seminars, Pittsburgh, Pa., December 3, 1981, St. Louis, Mo., December 10, 1981, and Denver, Colo., December 15, 1981These proceedings consist of papers presented at three Bureau of Mines Technology Transfer Seminars on ergonomics in the mining industry. These seminars were held in December 1981, and covered topics
Jan 1, 1981
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IC 9243 Human Factors In Mining Search SystemBy Richard S. Fowkes
This Bureau of Mines report describes the Human Factors in Mining Search System (HFMSS), a computerized information retrieval system that provides relevant human factors information from journal artic
Jan 1, 1990
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Bulletin 39 The Smoke Problem at Boiler Plants A Preliminary ReportBy D. T. Randall
Several years ago investigations were begun by the United States Government to determine the most efficient methods of utilizing the coals of the United States. These investigations, which were contin
Jan 1, 1912
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The Titaniferous Iron Ores In The United States; Their Composition And Economic Value. ? IntroductionBy Joseph T. Singewald
The term "titaniferous magnetite" is used to designate those magnetic ores of iron that carry more than 2 or 3 per cent of titanium. Large and easily workable deposits of these ores occur in different
Jan 1, 1913
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Vibration Time And Rest Time During Sinusoidal Vibration Experiments: Do These Factors Affect Comfort Ratings?By Vibration Research Group, Natasha K. Lee Shee, Tammy R. Eger, James P. Dickey, Paul-Émile Boileau, Lana M. Trick, Michele L. Oliver
Introduction Industrial exposure to whole-body vibration is associated with injury and discomfort. Certain industries, notably mining, construction, and forestry, involve complex 6 degrees of freed
Jan 6, 2006
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RI 9446 - In Situ Stress Measurements Near the Ross Shaft Pillar, Homestake Mine, South DakotaBy J. C. Johnson, W. G. Pariseau, D. F. Scott, F. M. Jenkins
In situ stresses are important input data for the design of safe, stable stope layouts and extraction sequences. However, it is commonly assumed that normal and shear stress gradients in a stress fiel
Jan 1, 1993
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OFR 38(1) - 74 - Survey Of Electromagnetic And Seismic Noise Related To Mine Rescue Communications - Volume I - Emergency And Operational Mine CommunicationsBy Robert L. Lagace
This final report documents the work done by Arthur D. Little, Inc. (ADL) on behalf of the U.S. Bureau of Mines, Pittsburgh Mining and Safety Research Center (PMSRC), on Contract H0122026 (which began
Jan 1, 1974
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OFR-113-83 Improving Check Curtains, Line Curtains And Extensible Face Ventilation SystemsBy T. Muldoon
Literature review and extensive field survey of line and check curtain materials and practices showed: ? Miners, in general, know how to set tight curtains, and do so when needed. ? The tradeoff
Jan 1, 1982
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RI 3694 Some Refractory Properties of Washington ChromiteBy Kenneth G. Skinner, Hewitt Wilson, Thomas L. Hurst
Although chromite deposits occur in California , Oregon, Washington, Montana, Wyoming , Pennsylvania, Maryland , New Mexico , North Carolina, Alaska, and the Phillippine Islands , less than 1 percent
Mar 1, 1943
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Vibration Control On Hand-Held Industrial Power Tools - IntroductionBy Lars Skogsberg
Work with hand-held power tools can be found in most industries all over the world. This type of work exposes the operators to different kind of loads like gripping-forces, feed-forces, exposure to vi
Jan 6, 2006
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IC 9191 Behavioral Accident Simulator Computer Program User Guide And Technical Reference ManualBy William E. Souder
The behavioral accident simulator (BAS) is a computer program that can be used to simulate accident situations. It demonstrates how the potential to have an accident grows or diminishes as a result of
Jan 1, 1988