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IC 7297 Control Of Silicosis Hazard By Substitution Of Quartz-Free Or Low-Quartz Material For Sand Used Under Mine Locomotives ? IntroductionBy Carlton E. Brown
Sand, which is used widely under the wheels of mine locomotives to prevent slipping, is an important source of silica dust breathed by some employees of certain mines, such as those having appreciable
Jan 1, 1944
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Using Site Case Histories Of Multiple Seam Coal Mining To Advance Mine DesignBy Frank E. Chase, John L. Ellenberger, Christopher Mark
The nature of competition in the coal market tends to deplete the most favorable coal reserves first, and forces subsequent development of mines in more extreme ground conditions such as those associa
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RI 6048 Flammability In Air Of Solvent Mixtures Containing Methyl Ethyl Ketone And Tetrahydrofuran ? Introduction And SummaryBy Michael G. Zabetakis
Vaporization of a solvent into an airstream at temperatures above the flash point of the solvent is hazardous if vapor is liberated at a rate that is sufficient to produce a flammable mixture. In may
Jan 1, 1962
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IC 7258 Strategic Mica ? IntroductionBy G. Richards Gwinn
In modern warfare, mica is truly indispensable. Coordination of combatant units necessitates maintenance of intricate communications equipment, in the construction of which high-grade sheet mica is es
Jan 1, 1943
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OFR-54-74 Effectiveness Of Respirable Dust Control By Water Through The Drum On An 11 Cm Joy Continuous MinerBy Gerald P. Scanlan
Control of the dust produced by continuous mining machines in coal mines is generally obtained by water sprays from fixed nozzles mounted on the frame of the machine in back of the cutting head. Mount
Jan 1, 1974
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IC 7278 Some Suggestions on Care in the Use and Handling of Explosives in Coal MinesBy Lloyd G. Fitzgerald
"The dangerous nature of explosives makes them a potential hazard wherever they are used, but they are likely to exercise their greatest harmfulness under conditions inherent in coal mining. The ease
Aug 1, 1944
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Bulletin 177 The Decline and Ultimate Production of Oil Wells, With Noes on the Valuation of Oil PorpertiesBy Carl H. Beal
The oil industry in the United States is further advanced than in any other country, because of American initiative and the development of industries dependent in some way on petroleum or its products
Jan 1, 1919
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RI 4519 Production Of Ductile Titanium At Boulder City, Nev.By F. S. Wartman
This paper gives an account of the production of ductile-grade titanium powder in 100-pound batches by reduction of purified titanic Chloride with magnesium, grinding, leaching, and magnetic-separatio
Jan 1, 1949
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RI 5061 Progress Report On Pegmatite Investigations In South Dakota For Fiscal Years 1952-53 ? Summary And IntroductionBy S. M. Runke
An earlier Bureau of Mines report4/ reviewed and summarized all reports of investigations dealing with the coarse grained pegmatites of the Black Hills of South Dakota to dune 1951. It was proposed
Jan 1, 1954
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Mining And Mineral Operations In The South-Central States - A Visitor Guide ? IntroductionMinerals are vital to any industrialized civilization. Annually, the United States uses more than 4 billion tons of new mineral materials, or about 40,000 pounds per person-about half being mineral fu
Jan 1, 1977
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MLA 84-83 - Mineral Investigation Of The Coyote-Southeast Rare II Area (No. 5033), Inyo County, California ? SummaryBy Donald O. Capstick
A mineral resource evaluation of the Coyote-Southeast RARE II area (No. 5033) was performed jointly by the U.S. Bureau of Mines and the U.S. Geological Survey in 1981 for the U.S. Forest Service RARE
Jan 1, 1983
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MLA 10-81 - Mineral Resources Of The Domeland Addition (5207) And Woodpecker (5206) Rare II Areas, Tulare And Kern Counties, CaliforniaBy James M. Spear
The U.S. Bureau of Mines conducted a mineral survey of the Domeland Addition (5207) and Woodpecker (5206) RARE II areas during the summer of 1979. These study areas were examined to determine the pres
Jan 1, 1981
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OFR-150-83 Ground Control In Multi-Level Room And Pillar MinesBy William G. Pariseau
The research reported here concerns ground control in multi-seam mining and relates mainly to the analysis of stress about multi-seam room and pillar mines. The two variables of most concern are dista
Jan 1, 1983
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MLA 17-82 - Mineral Resources Of The Welcome Creek Wilderness, Granite County, Montana ? Summary StatementBy Terry J. Close
The Welcome Creek Wilderness has small, dispersed gold placers. Pockets in the 25.5 million yd3 (19.5 million m3) of alluvium along Welcome and Rock Creeks have as much as $5.61 gold/yd3 ($7.34/m3) at
Jan 1, 1982
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A New Concept for Leak Testing Environmental Enclosure Filtration SystemsBy Michael Schmitz, John A. Organiscak
ABSTRACT: A method (patent pending) has been developed to determine the quality of environmental cab filtration systems. This method utilizes specially configured filter cartridges to remove carbon di
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Evaluation Of The Impact Of Standing Support On Ground Behavior In Longwall TailgatesBy Thomas M. Barczak, Dennis R. Dolinar, Gabriel S. Esterhuizen
Longwall mines typically use some form of standing support for secondary roof support in longwall tailgate entries. Although there have been several new support products developed for this applicatio
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Problems With Rock Classification For Empirical And Numerical DesignBy Douglas Milne
Most empirical and numerical approaches to design in rock mechanics incorporate rock mass classification. Numerical design methods generally use classification values to calculate input parameters for
Jan 5, 2007
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OFR-19-76 Development Of A Prototype Instant Working Level Meter With Automatic Individual Radon-Daughter Readout ? 1.0 IntroductionBy Peter G. Groer
The commonly used exact methods (1-2) to determine the WL measure the total a activity or the total number of a counts during three preselected time periods. Due to the half-lives involved (TRaB = 26.
Jan 1, 1975
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MLA 11-83 - Mineral Investigation Of The Bear Canyon Rare II Area (No. 5104), Monterey County, CaliforniaBy John R. Benham
The Bureau of Mines examined the Bear Canyon RARE II area in 1982. The area has no identified mineral deposits. The few claims that were located in the study area are devoid of any workings. No concen
Jan 1, 1983
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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