Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
OFR-128-85 Development Of Prototype Quiet Hard Rock Stoper Drill - Volume IBy Piyush K. Dutta
This report describes the design, development and manufacture of a prototype quiet hard rock stoper drill and results of its field tests. It is shown that the stoper drill noise level can be reduced f
Jan 1, 1985
-
OFR-4-70 Mine Rescue And Survival - Coal Mining In The United StatesIn 1967 the United States consumed 58.8 quadrillion Btu of energy. Both the Atomic Energy Commission and the Resources for the Future, Inc., a private economic forecasting group, predict that the Unit
Jan 1, 1970
-
RI 6674 Preparation Of Primary Standard Gas Mixtures For Analytical InstrumentsBy J. E. Miller
Primary standard gas mixtures were developed for more accurate calibration of analytical instruments at the Bureau of Mines Helium Research Center and for calibration of analytical instruments used in
Jan 1, 1965
-
IC 9314 Three-dimensional Graphics Simulator For Testing Mine Machine Computer Controlled Algorithms-Phase 1 DevelopmentBy Dean H. Ambrose
Using three-dimensional (3-0) graphics computing to evaluate new technologies for computer-assisted mining systems illustrates how these visual techniques can redefine the way researchers look at raw
Jan 1, 1992
-
RI 3354 Hardening Of Mud Sheaths In Contact With Oil, And A Suggested Method For Minimizing Their Sealing Effect In Oil Wells ? IntroductionBy C. P. Bowie
For years many oil producers have believed that often low-pressure oil- and gas-bearing strata have been over coked in fields where the rotary system of drilling has been used. Collom3/ gave as a rea
Jan 1, 1937
-
RI 6940 Extraction Of Germanium And Gallium From Coal Fly Ash And Phosphorus Furnace Flue DustBy R. F. Waters
Laboratory-scale selective volatilization methods developed by the Bureau of Mines to recover germanium and gallium concentrates from coal fly ash and phosphorus furnace flue dust are summarized. In t
Jan 1, 1967
-
RI 2531 Effect Of Cooling Systems On Evaporation Losses Of Gasoline. ? IntroductionBy Ludwig Schmidt
The consumption of gasoline in the United States varies materially with the seasons; during some of the summer months it exceeds the rate of production and in the other seasons the production of gasol
Jan 1, 1923
-
IC 9249 Slip-And-Fall Accidents During Equipment Maintenance In The Surface Mining IndustryBy Thomas J. Albin
This U.S. Bureau of Mines report identifies potential causes of slip-and-fall accidents occurring during surface mine equipment maintenance and describes the relative roles of direct worker behavior a
Jan 1, 1990
-
RI 9117 - Analysis of Cutter Roof Failure Induced by Clastic Dikes in an Underground Coal MineCutter roof failure, a ground control problem that frequently results in massive roof failure, is common in coal mines of the Northern Appala-chian Coal Basin, causing delays in production and posing
Jan 1, 1987
-
Bulletin 19 Physical And Chemical Properties Of The Petroleumb Of The San Joaquin Valley, CalBy IRVINGC. ALLEN, W. A. Jacobs
Realizing the great importance and wide application of petroleum and its products for fuel,lighting and lubrication, and the absence of authentic and comprehensive information in the literature on the
Jan 1, 1911
-
IC 7949 Training Technical Personnel For The Mineral Industries Of The U.S.S.R. - IntroductionBy Bernadette C. Michalski
Mineral raw materials, labor, capital, and technology form the basis of industrial production. The augmentation of one or all of the elements--labor, capital, and technology--will result in industrial
Jan 1, 1960
-
IC 9180 Tin Occurrences Near Rocky Mountain (Lime Peak), East-Central AlaskaBy J. Dean Warner
In 1984 and 1985, as part of its critical and strategic minerals studies, the Bureau of Mines investigated lode and placer tin occurrences near Rocky Mountain (Lime Peak), in east-central Alaska. The
Jan 1, 1988
-
RI 4887 Recovery Of Oil In California By Secondary Methods - In Two Parts - Part II. Los Angeles Basin And Coastal Oil FieldsBy A. G. Loomis
Although secondary-recovery methods have not been applied widely in California, it is apparent that increasing attention and effort must be given to this phase of recovery if the State is to maintain
Jan 1, 1952
-
IC 8503 Sampling And Evaluating Respirable Coal Mine Dust - A Training ManualThe Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969 requires that each operator of a coal mine shall take accurate samples of the amount of respirable dust in the mine atmosphere to which each miner i
Jan 1, 1971
-
The Mineral Industry Of Other Central African Countries - CameroonBy Janke L. W. Jolly
Owing to an upsurge in export earnings. Cameroon made substantial economic Progress in 1978 and 1979. With a real growth estimated at 6%, the gross domestic product (GDP) for 1979 surpassed $5 billion
Jan 1, 1981
-
RI 3203 Places Of Occurrence Of Injury From Falls Of RoofBy J. W. Paul
A study of mining methods and underground practices as they influence injury from falls of roof or coal reveals data as to the location in the mine where such injuries occur with the greatest frequenc
Jan 1, 1933
-
RI 5279 Description And Operation Of The N-T-U Retort On Colorado All ShaleBy J. R. Ruark
Because of the importance of oil-shale reserves the Bureau or Mines resumed research investigations in this field beginning in 1944. The Bureau early decided to build a Large-scale demonstration plant
Jan 1, 1956
-
RI 6715 Corrosion Properties Of Molybdenum, Tungsten, Vanadium And Some Vanadium AlloysBy W. L. Acherman
Molybdenum, tungsten, and vanadium were found by the Bureau of Mines to possess generally superior chemical and galvanic corrosion properties in many aqueous corrosive media at temperatures up to the
Jan 1, 1966
-
IC 7450 Consumption of Slab Zinc in the United States by Industries, Grades, and Geographic Division, 1940-45By Alfred L. Ransome
The consumption of slab zinc in the United States increased sevenfold in less than a half century since 1900. Therein is reflected the innate characteristics of this versatile and nearly indispensable
Feb 1, 1948
-
IC 7034 Petroleum Refineries, Including Cracking Plants, in the United States, January I, 1938By G. R. Hopkins, E. W. COCHRANE
The number of completed petroleum refineries in the United States continued to decline in 1937 , but the total capacity to process crude oil continued to increase . These facts were ascertained in the
Aug 1, 1938