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A Comparison Of Longwall & Continuous Mining Safety In US Coal Mines 1988 – 1997 - Longwall Mining SafetyBy Sean Gallagher, Rhys Llewellyn, Jay Mattos
This paper contains the results of an examination of accident, injury, employment, and production information reported to the U.S. Department of Labor's Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSH
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RI 2144 Precautions in Use of Oxygen Rescue ApparatusBy Geo S. Rice
"Three men lost their lives in the Black Diamond Coal Mine near Seattle, Wash., recently while wearing oxygen breathing apparatus. The press dispatches stated that these men lost their lives while pra
Jul 1, 1920
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Bulletin 47 Notes on Mineral WastesBy Charles L. Parsons
During the past year, in producing 500,000,000 tons of coal we wasted or left underground, in such condition that it probably will not be recovered in the future, 250,000,000 tons of coal; we turned l
Jan 1, 1912
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Bulletin 97 Sampling and Analyzing Flue GasesBy Henry Kreisinger, F. K. Ovrız
Some of the investigations conducted by the Bureau of Mines have for their object the collecting and disseminating of information regard- ing methods by which the fuels of the country may be most effi
Jan 1, 1915
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Bulletin 27 Test of Coal and BriquetsBy D. T. Randall
In carrying out a general plan of ascertaining more efficient and more economical methods of utilizing the fuel resources of the United States, in order to prevent unnecessary waste and thus conserve
Jan 1, 1911
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Evaluation Of The Bagged Stone Dust Barrier Effectiveness In A Bord And Pillar MineBy K. L. Cashdollar
A project to evaluate the South African bagged stone dust explosion barrier was successfully completed at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (MOSH), Pittsburgh Research Laborato
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Factors Influencing Intersection Stability In U.S. Coal MinesBy Deno Pappas, Gregory Molinda, Eric Bauer, Christopher Mark, Daniel Babich
Groundfalls are much more likely to occur in coal mine intersections than in entries. NIOSH is using the experience of U.S. coal mines to determine the factors which influence intersection instability
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IC 6335 Notes on the Determination of MolybdenumBy H. A. Doerner
The Rare and Precious Metals Station of the U. S. Bureau of Mines has investigated several cases in which widely divergent amounts of molybdenum were reported by a number of custom laboratories to whi
Sep 1, 1930
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RI 2308 Safety of Mine-Type TelephoneBy L. C. IlsLey
A preliminary investigation has recently been made by the U. S. Bureau of Mines to determine whether or not the ordinary mine- type telephone is entirely safe in gaseous atmospheres . Two well known m
Jan 1, 1922
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Design Of Primary Roof Support Systems In US Coal Mines Based On The Analysis Of Roof Fall RatesBy G. Molinda, D. Dolinar
Each year, about 2,000 falls of supported roof occur in the more than 800 underground U.S. coal mines. Therefore to help improve the design of primary support systems, the National Institute for Occup
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IC 6549 Physical Chemical Properties of MethaneBy H. H. Storch
Methane is the chief constituent of natural gas, and large quantities of it are also obtained in coke-oven gas and in the off-gases from cracking higher hydrocarbons. Perhaps the most important potent
Jan 1, 1932
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RI 2374 Summary Of Investigations Of Dust And Ventilation In Metal Mines - With A BibliographyBy D. Hurrington
For severlrl 1e1.rs the Bureau of Mines has studied dust and ventili in metal mines a.s a.tfeoting the hea.l th, safety, and efficiency of underground workers. From its beginning this work haa been d
Jul 1, 1922
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RI 9423 - Hybrid Fiber-Optic Electrochemical Carbon Monoxide MonitorBy J. E. Chilton, C. R. Carpenter
The U.S. Bureau of Mines has developed an intrinsically safe carbon monoxide (CO) monitoring system for mines by coupling a fiber-optic data telemetry (FODT) system with a prototype electro- chemical
Jan 1, 1992
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Employment And Injuries In The Fuel IndustriesBy Forrest T. Moyer
General injury experience in the mineral fuel industries was less favorable in 1965. Of the major industry groups, the coal mining and the coke industries had higher injury-frequency and severity rate
Jan 1, 1967
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RI 3374 Cooperative Fuel Research Motor-Gasoline Survey - Summer 1937By E. C. Lane
"INTRODUCTION This is the fourth in a series of reports on properties of commercial motor fuels, made in accordance with a cooperative agreement between the Cooperative Fuel Research (C.F.R.) Committe
Dec 1, 1937
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Bulletin 175 Experiment Stations of the Bureau of MinesBy VAN. H. MANNING
During the nine years that have elapsed since the Bureau of Mines was established in 1910, the work of the bureau has included many investigations that have proved of high value to the Nation. Eleven
Jan 1, 1919
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Surveillance of Disaster—A View From The DenominatorBy Robert F. Chaken
The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) is dedicated to achieving "safety and health at work for all people -- through research and prevention." An important procedure in purs
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Recommendations (7f93c332-3455-473c-81c4-41f1b8845170)The following additional studies are recommended: 1. Future development of the magnetic sludge process should involve optimization of the process variables; these include stirring rate, sludge heat
Jan 1, 1971
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Bulletin 170 Extinguising and Preventing Oil and Gas FiresBy C. P. Bowie
During the period of 10 years from January 1, 1908, to January 1, 1918, approximately 12,850,000 barrels of oil and 5,024,506,000 cubic feet of gas were destroyed by fire in the United States, entaili
Jan 1, 1919
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Ergonomic Seat with viscoelastic foam reduces shock underground mobile equipmentBy Ron Merkel, A. Mayton
Operators of underground mobile equipment, particularly shuttle cars, are often exposed to significant levels of whole-body vibration (WBV) and shock. The human factors group at the NIOSH-Pittsburg Re