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Continuous Mining Machine Conveyor System Sound Power LevelsBy Adam K. Smith
Occupational hearing loss is a permanent illness with no recovery currently possible. For underground coal mine workers, Noise Induced Hearing Loss (NIHL) continues to be a serious health issue. One
Jan 1, 2008
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IC 8224 Safety Organization And Activities Of A Ward -Winning Companies In The Coal-Mining Industry ? IntroductionBy Robert T. Davis
An award is a form of recognition given for superior performance in a special field of endeavor. Each year awards are given by the Joseph A. Holmes Safety Association and the National Safety Council t
Jan 1, 1964
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Roof Stability Issues in Underground Limestone Mines in the United StatesBy Leonard J. Prosser, Dennis R. Dolinar, John L. Ellenberger, Gabriel S. Esterhuizen, Anthony T. Iannacchione
The room-and-pillar mining method is used extensively in underground limestone mines in the Eastern and Midwestern U.S. The rock mass is typically a near-horizontal, bedded deposit at relatively shall
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RI 3248 Dewatering Clay Suspensions by Spray EvaporationBy George A. Page, Hewitt Wilson, Vance S. Cartwright
"Purpose of InvestigationThe process of removing solid material from liquid suspensions has been studied at the Northwest Experiment Station, United States Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with the Uni
Jan 1, 1935
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RI 3659 Manganese Investigation - Metallurgical 18. Pyrometallurgical Studies of Manganese Ores – Smelting of Manganese Oxide, Carbonate or Silicate Cres with Copper and IronBy Virgil Miller, R. G. Knickerbacken
"INTRODUCTION The Bureau of Mines work reported by the Metallurgical Division 4/ in 1934 shows the possibility of producing artificial manganese ore by pre- ferential oxidation of manganese from spieg
Aug 1, 1942
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RI 4945 Processes For Beneficiating Great Gossan Lead Ores, Carroll County, Va. ? Introduction And SummaryBy James S. Browning
[The objective of this project wan to determine the technical feasibility of recovering the associated copper, lead, and zinc from the pyrrhotite axe, of the Great Gossan lead, which has bon pined onl
Jan 1, 1953
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RI 2832 Comparison Of Oils Derived From Coal And From Oil Shale ? IntroductionBy Joseph W. Horne
This report presents the results of an investigation by the U. S. Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the State of Colorado, on the yields and properties of oils produced from oil shale, lignite and s
Jan 1, 1927
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OFR-156(2)-77 Technical And Cost Evaluation Of Candidate Large Scale Open Pit Oil Shale Mining Methods In Colorado ? Volume IIBy R. C. Adams
This report describes the feasibility of mining the oil-shale deposits of the Piceance Creek basin in Colorado by an integrated open pit system. The study is based upon a comprehensive analysis of per
Jan 1, 1976
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Analysis Of Multiple Seam StabilityBy Frank E. Chase, Deno M. Pappas, Christopher Mark
Multiple seam interactions are a major ground control hazard in many U.S. underground coal mines. The two most common types are: • Undermining, where stress concentrations caused by previous full
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CO Dispersion From A Coal Fire In A Mine EntryBy R. A. Franks, G. F. Friel, J. C. Edwards, L. Yuan
Five mine fire experiments were conducted in a 2.08m high and 2.90m wide, ventilated mine entry in the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)'s Safety Research Coal Mine (S
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IC 7247 Economic Considerations In The Recovery Of Magnesia From Dolomite ? IntroductionBy Alvin Schallis
The. problem of supplying enough magnesia for the American war effort has become highly important. Before hostilities began, only about two-thirds of our, require vents came from domestic sources; now
Jan 1, 1943
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Mechanized Excavability Rating For Hard-Rock MiningBy Z. T. Bieniawski, Benjamín Celada
After emphasizing the importance of quantitative rock mass classifications in mining, originally directed to selection of rock support measures, but subsequently to estimates of rock mass properties s
Jan 5, 2007
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RI 8555 The Geologic Character of Some Coal Wants at the Westland Mine in Southwestern PennsylvaniaBy Noel N. Moebs
The coal wants at the Westland Mine in southwestern Pennsylvania consist chiefly of elongated, sandstone-filled channels with slickensided basal contacts. Tentatively identified as washouts, these cha
Jan 1, 1981
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RI 9318 - Leaching of Pyroxmangite Ore With Calcium Fluoride and Sulfuric AcidBy S. R. Droes
The U.S. Bureau of Mines investigated calcium fluoride (CaF2) assisted sulfuric acid (H2S04) leaching as an alternative to the melting-quenching procedure to obtain Mn from domestic manganese silicate
Jan 1, 1990
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Remote Vision System for Dozers on Coal StockpilesBy William H. Schiffbauer, Timothy Lutz, Michael R. Yenchek
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Pittsburgh Research Laboratory (PRL) participated in an experiment to facilitate the remote control of dozers used on coal stockpiles.
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New Tools For Roof Support Evaluation And DesignBy Carl Sunderman, Steve Signer
Researchers at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) have developed several new tools for evaluating roof support performance. A miniature data acquisition system (MIDAS)
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Reducing roof bolter operator cumulative trauma exposure - Ergonomics considerations for reducing cumulative trauma exposureBy Kim M. Cornelius
Musculoskeletal injury is a term used to describe a wide range of soft tissue disorders which affect the nerves, tendons, and muscles. Common examples include lower back pain, tendonitis, and carpal t
Jan 1, 1997
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OFR-43-74 Coal Mining Using High Pressure Water Jets - 1.0 IntroductionBy Madan M. Singh
Hydraulic mining has been practiced in the United States since 1852 and many mineral commodities, such as gilsonite, phosphates, lead-zinc, silver ores and St. Peter Sandstone can be mined in this man
Jan 1, 1973
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Teaching Miners: Breaking The Barriers To LearningBy Elaine T. Cullen
Miners, like many skilled blue-collar workers, are not traditional learners. They have not always been successful in classroom-type settings, preferring to learn on the job in a hands-on environment.
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Bulletin 130 Blast-Furnace Breakouts, Explosions, and Slips, and Methods of PreventionBy F. H. Willcox
This publication is the third of a series of reports on hazards and the prevention of accidents at blast-furnace plants that is being published by the Bureau of Mines, Technical Paper 106a being the f
Jan 1, 1917