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OFR-138(3)-84 The Development Of Guidelines For Closing Eastern Underground Coal MinesBy Linneas W. Laage
Coal production from underground coal mines has been important to the development of the industrial economy of the United States. Environmental problems have developed from some abandoned operations.
Jan 1, 1982
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IC 7694 It Couldn't Happen (A Description Of Five Unusual Fatal Mine Accidents)By D. S. Kingery
This study describes five fatal accidents so unusual in occurrence that the chain of circumstances bringing them about may never be duplicated. The intent of this publication is to illustrate that eve
Jan 1, 1954
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RI 6284 Modifications in Bomb Reduction of Vanadium OxideBy C. J. Chindgren, L. C. Bauerle, J. B. Rosenbaum
Modifications of the conventional method of preparing ductile vanadium metal by calcium reduction of V2 05 in a bomb were explored for clues to a more economical procedure . The modifications examined
Jul 1, 1960
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IC 9233 A Personal Miner's Carbon Monoxide AlarmBy J. E. Chilton
Underground miners may be exposed to hazardous quantities of toxic gases, such as carbon monoxide (CO), generated from mine fires or explosions. Every underground miner is required to carry a filter s
Jan 1, 1989
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RI 6853 Vapor Deposition Of Molybdenum-Tungsten AlloysBy J. G. Donaldson
Binary alloys of molybdenum and tungsten were prepared by the Bureau of Mines in laboratory-scale experiments by hydrogen reduction of their vaporized hexafluorides. Near-optimum deposition parameters
Jan 1, 1966
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Summary Of Major Mineral Commodities And Leading Producers For 1993 - BauxiteBy Michael D. Fenton
Bauxite resources were primarily in Africa, Asia, Oceania, and South America. Only five countries combined, Australia, Brazil, Guinea, India, and Jamaica, contained most of the total world reserves av
Jan 1, 1995
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RI 3332 Survey of Fuel Consumption at Refineries in 1935By G. R. Hopkins
"A new record in fuel efficiency at petroleum refineries was achieved in 1935, when an average of only 615,000 B. t. u. was needed to refine a barrel of crude oil, compared with an average of 638,000
Jan 1, 1937
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IC 8653 Economic Significance Of The Florida Phosphate IndustryBy Kung-Lee Wang
This Bureau of Mines study illustrates the economic significance of the Florida phosphate industry to the State and to the Nation. Environmental considerations related to phosphate industry activity a
Jan 1, 1974
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MLA 17-94 - Mineral Resource Investigation Of Eight Roadless Areas In MontanaBy Ronald B. Stotelmeyer
This report summarizes the U.S. Bureau of Mines evaluation of the mineral resources of eight roadless areas in several National Forests in Montana. The areas are amoung those that have been proposed a
Jan 1, 1994
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RI 6541 Investigation of In Situ Rock StressesBy Donald O. Rausch, Robert H. Merrill, David W. Wisecarver, S. Jackson Hubbard
Results are reported for stress - relief borehole - deformation measurements made in three underground openings near open - pit mines in the Ruth mining district , Nevada . A total of 134 deformation
Jan 1, 1964
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Effects of Diesel Exhaust Aftertreatment Devices on Concentrations and Size Distribution of Aerosols in Underground Mine AirBy Aleksandar D. Bugarski
Three types of uncatalyzed diesel particulate filter (DPF) systems, three types of high-temperature disposable filter elements (DFEs), and one diesel oxidation catalytic converter (DOC) were evaluated
Jan 1, 2009
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Bulletin 45 Sand Available for Filling Mine Workings in the Northern Anthracite Basin in PABy N. H. Darton
In mining coal in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania the general custom has been to leave a large percentage of the coal in place as pillars to support the roof. Evidently any practice that involve
Jan 1, 1913
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RI 5060 Bureau Of Mines Liquid-Level Gage ? SummaryBy H. C. Hamontre
The liquid-level gage described in this report is an instrument designed to locate liquid levels in wells rapidly and accurately and, with auxiliary equipment described, to follow moving liquid levels
Jan 1, 1954
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Multi-Axis Hand-Arm Vibration Testing & Simulation At The National Institute Of Industrial Health, Kawasaki, Japan - IntroductionBy Tony Keller, Setsuo Maeda
Hand-Arm Vibration Syndrome (HAVS) was identified as early as 1918 in Bedford, Indiana in the U.S. Since then much research work has been done around the world in the areas of medical, epidemiological
Jan 6, 2006
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RI 8854 Use of Bureau of Mines Turbomill To Produce High-Purity Ultrafine Nonoxide Ceramic PowdersBy Dale E. Wittmer
Nonoxide ceramic materials could substitute for high-temperature alloy steels containing imported critical and strategic materials such as cobalt, chromium, and nickel if their high-temperature proper
Jan 1, 1984
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RI 8219 Extracting Uranium From a Wyoming GraniteBy J. H. Maysilles
The Bureau of Mines is examining a variety of low-grade uranium ores because projections indicate that an appreciable percentage of future U.S. uranium production will be derived from resources contai
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 8242 Principles of Ionization Smoke Detection. Development of a New Sensor for Combustion-Generated Submicrometer ParticulatesBy Charles D. Litton
A new prototype ionization-attachment fire detector was developed by the Bureau of Mines for detecting combustion-generated submicrometer particulates. It is much more sensitive than the conventional
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 7128 Developing A Thermochemical Model For The Iron Blast Furnace - Rate Of Reduction Of Granular Ferrous Oxide By Carbon Monoxide In A Packed BedBy Hillary W. St. Clair
Reaction rate coefficients were determined from analyses of the effluent gas for the reduction of granular ferrous oxide to metallic iron by passing carbon monoxide through a packed bed of oxide at a
Jan 1, 1968
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RI 6246 Sources And Recovery Methods For RheniumBy P. E. Churchward
Rhenium sources and recovery methods were investigated by the Bureau of Mines to delineate potential resources of the metal. The only significant rhenium resource appears to be about 28,000 lb of rhen
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 9311 - Effect of Nonionic Surfactants on Chalcopyrite Leaching Under Dump Chemical ConditionsBy S. P. Sandoval
Several researchers have shown that the surface of chalcopyrite becomes hydrophobic under oxidizing conditions. Because dissolution of copper from chalcopyrite in dump leaching occurs under oxidizing
Jan 1, 1990