Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
RI 3066 The Use Of Aluminum For Oil Lease Tanks: Part I - Field Tests ? IntroductionBy Ludwig Schmidt
[Steel tanks often corrode rapidly in oil fields where the gas produced with crude petroleum contains an appreciable quantity of hydrogen sulphide. In many instances working tanks have been discarded
Jan 1, 1931
-
IC 6513 Method And Cost Of Quarrying Limestone At The Quarry Of The Trinity Portland Cement Co., Fort Worth, Tex. ? IntroductionBy J. William Ganser
This paper is one of a series being prepared by the United States Bureau of Mines describing mining and milling methods and costs at cement-plant quarries throughout the United States. These papers
Jan 1, 1931
-
IC 6180 Mining Soft Hematite By Open Stopes At Mine No. 1, Menominee Range, MichiganBy Lucien Eaton
This paper describing the mining practices at Mine No. 1, Menominee Range, Mich., is one of a. series being prepared by the Bureau of Mines on mining practices, methods, and costs in the various minin
Jan 1, 1929
-
IC 6421 Method And Cost Of Dredging Sand And Gravel By The Ohio River Sand Co., Louisville, Ky. ? IntroductionBy J. Hamilton Duffy
This is the first of, a series of papers describing dredging methods and costs in recovering sand and gravel from the beds of rivers throughout the United States and deals directly with the methods em
Jan 1, 1931
-
RI 4739 Some Innovations In Equipment For Scaling High Roofs And Mine WallsBy Brinton C. Brown
This paper describes the methods and equipment developed at the Bureau's Experimental Oil-Shale mine near Rifle, Colo., for placing men in position to scale loose rock from the walls, pillars, an
Jan 1, 1950
-
RI 3121 Comparison Of A Storage-Battery And Cable-Reel Gathering Locomotives In A West Virginia Coal MineBy C. W. Owings
"PURPOSE OF REPORTThe safety and efficacy of permissible storage—battery gathering locomotives are becoming recognized more and more in coal mines. The great mobility of this type of haulage equipment
Aug 1, 1931
-
RI 3185 Toxicity Of DichlorotetrafluoroethaneBy W. P. Yant
A previous report of the Bureau of Mines dealt with the toxicity of dichlorodifluoromethane, a new refrigerant that has a remarkably low toxicity. Continued research by the Frigidaire Corporation and
Jan 1, 1932
-
RI 7487 Method For Controlling Instability Of Liquid-Saturation ComputationsBy C. Kenneth Eilerts
A method is described for controlling instability in finite-difference computations of liquid saturation near the borehole of a recovery well. Differences of pressure-and saturation-dependent variable
Jan 1, 1971
-
RI 9526 - Extended Workdays in an Underground Mine: A Work Performance AnalysisBy J. C. Duchon
The use of extended workdays or compressed workweeks (regular shift lengths exceeding 8 h) is attracting growing interest in many industries using continuous operations. While extended workdays promis
Jan 1, 2010
-
RI 8443 Shape-Casting Titanium in Olivine, Garnet, Chromite, and Zircon Rammed and Shell MoldsBy R. K. Koch
In seeking substitutes for such critical metals as chromium, cobalt, and nickel, the Bureau of Mines investigated techniques for shape-casting titanium in rammed sand molds. Castings were made in oliv
Jan 1, 1980
-
RI 8899 - Scale Inhibitors and Slow-Release Polymers for Mine Water Treatment SystemsBy T. E. Ackman
Scale inhibitors and slow-release polymers were tested by the Bureau of Mines at mine drainage treatment facilities. The scale inhibitors were investigated to determine their effectiveness in controll
Jan 1, 1984
-
RI 6197 Heats And Free Energies Of Formation Of Vanadates Of Lead And ManganeseBy K. K. Kelley
The heats of formation of two lead vanadates (Pb2V207 and Pb3V208) and manganese vanadate (MnV206) were determined by hydrochloric acid solution calorimetry, supplementing previous Bureau of Mines mea
Jan 1, 1963
-
Generation and Entrainment of Coal Dust in Underground MinesBy R. V. Ramani, J. Qin
"During the mining process, the insitu material is broken into different size ranges, from very, large pieces to very fine particles. Some of the fine particles become airborne. In underground coal mi
Jan 1, 1989
-
RI 9022 - Recovery of Silver, Gold, and Lead From a Complex Sulfide Ore Using Ferric Chloride, Thiourea, and Brine Leach SolutionsBy R. G. Sandberg
The Bureau of Mines investigated a hydrometallurgical procedure to recover gold, silver, and byproduct lead from a complex lead-zinc sulfide ore. A ferric chloride (FeCI3) preleach, at 40° C in 6 h, e
Jan 1, 1986
-
IC 7725 Conversion Tables For Fluorescent X-Ray Spectroscopy - IntroductionBy William J. Campbell
The possibility of chemical analysis by identification of characteristic X-ray spectral lines was first suggested by H. C. J. Moseley in 1913.3/ For a given spectral series it was found that the frequ
Jan 1, 1955
-
IC 7118 More Jobs For MineralsBy Paul M. Tyler
One of the best present-day yardsticks of the material welfare of a nation is its consumption of minerals, The United States, with only 7 percent of the world population, consumes 45 percent of the wo
Jan 1, 1940
-
Micro-Seismic Method Of Determining The Stability Of Underground Openings ? IntroductionBy Leonard Obert
THE CRACKING AND POPPING of rock, often heard by men working underground, for years has been interpreted as a warning of danger and unstable ground. However, not until 1939 was it discovered that rock
Jan 1, 1957
-
RI 8549 Reduction Roasting and Beneficiation of a Hematitic-Goethitic TaconiteBy R. E. Peterson
A reduction roasting/magnetic separation/flotation process for beneficiating oxidized taconite from the western Mesabi iron range in Minnesota was evaluated in a Bureau of Mines research program to in
Jan 1, 1981
-
IC 8880 Some Design Factors For Windows And Lenses Used In Explosion-Proof EnclosuresBy Lawrence W. Sott
This Bureau of Mines report presents several factors that currently enter into the design, manufacture, and testing of windows and lenses used in explosion-proof enclosures. Emphasis is also given to
Jan 1, 1982
-
IC 7057 State Regulations Pertaining To Hoisting Of Men ? GeneralBy L. C. IlsLey
Most State enacting bodies have deemed it necessary to specify a maximum speed at which men may be hoisted or lowered in mine shafts. Since most mine cages are not closed in, as are passenger elevator
Jan 1, 1939