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RI 5724 Smelting Taconite In The Bureau Of Mines Experimental Blast Furnace ? Introduction And SummaryBy Miles B. Royert
Crude Minnesota taconite was charged in the Bureau of Mines experimental blast furnace so that smelting characteristics of such highly siliceous raw materials could be studied and smelting costs compa
Jan 1, 1961
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RI 3284 The Ignition Temperatures Of Diethyl Ether And Ethylene In Air And Oxygen ? IntroductionBy G. W. Jones
[The determination of the ignition tcqornturc ol" dict:iyl cther and othylene in air ma o;GrT;en rir..ic'r. is dcscribed In thin report J'IF.R mqdo primarily for comparison rritll sinilnr d~
Jan 1, 1935
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IC 8713 Strippable Coal Resources Of Colorado - Location, Tonnage, And Characteristics Of Coal And OverburdenBy Charles N. Speltz
Coal resource data from public and private sources, in conjunction with previously published data, were used by the Bureau of Mines to determine the location and extent of strippable coal resources in
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 4239 Georgia Mica Spots Cherokee, Upson, Lamar, and Monroe CountiesBy William A. Beck
"INTRODUCTION Mica is found in Georgia from the Fall Line in the central part of the State to the Valley and Ridge Province in the northwest. During the past 3 years, Georgia has been one of the chief
Apr 1, 1948
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OFR-90-78 Electrical Materials Analysis - ArcingBy Frederick C. Trutt
Research performed on arcing faults and their interaction; with electrical insulating materials within coal.-mine power-system enclosures is described. This work was performed at The Pennsylvania Stat
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 4636 Pressure-Relieving Capacities of Diaphragms and Other Devices for Venting Dust Explosions (ecafc1e0-0683-43c9-9c26-7de4dd3008be)By J. E. Zeilinger, John Nagy, Irving Hartman
"INTRODUCTION Experience and research have shown that an effective way to reduce structural damage from explosions is to provide adequate pressure-relief vents in the walls of equipment and buildings
Jan 1, 1950
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RI 3525 Progress Reports - Metallurgical Division - 40. Beneficiation Of Boron Minerals - Beneficiation Of Boron Minerals By Flotation As Boric Acid ? IntroductionBy R. G. Knickerbocker
[The Electrornetal~.1~~1c~.l T,:tt31~tn~ir of the Bureau of Miner,, 3oulder City, !.Tev. , invsst:'.~:es 1:h .-inc.z-.l ci.c;,oritr, in 51-3 regon around Boulder Dam, i~d. this papei- ?i*esmt; tv
Jan 1, 1940
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RI 4936 Tests Of The Anthratube ? IntroductionBy J. F. Barkley
At the request of several Federal agencies, tests were conducted on a relatively recent type of anthracite -burning equipment named the Anthratube. This device, rated at 130,000 B.t .u. per hour, was
Jan 1, 1953
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Storage Stability Of Gasoline - Fundamentals Of Gum Formation, Including A Discussion Of Radiotracer TechniquesBy Frank G. Schwartz
VARIABLES OF composition and environment affecting storage stability of gasoline-type fuels were studied, utilizing radioactive tracers and other analytical techniques. Changes in gasoline compositi
Jan 1, 1964
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Advances In Coal Spectrometry - Absorption SpectrometryBy R. A. Friedel
THE IMPORTANCE of infrared and ultraviolet-visible spectrometry in studies of the structure of coal and similar substances is described. Special experimental techniques have been developed for these s
Jan 1, 1967
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OFR-8(3)-76 Analysis Of Men, Materials And Supplies Handling Systems In Underground Metal And Non-Metal Mines - Volume II - Appendices Associated With Phase I Report ? Glossary? CAGER, CAGE RIDER, CAGE TENDER, SHAFT MEN All of the above job titles are variously associated with the handling of men and material at hoist stations. Generally, these classifications of person
Jan 1, 1975
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IC 8738 Coal Recovery From Bituminous Coal Surface Mines In The Eastern United States, A SurveyBy Edwin S. Secor
The Federal Bureau of Mines conducted a field survey of 153 bituminous coal strip and auger mines to estimate coal recovery from surface mines in the Eastern United States. Recovery was calculated fro
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 9583 - Use of a Tracer for In Situ Stope Leaching Solution Containment ResearchBy Nadia C. Miller
In situ stope leaching is an innovative mining system that reduces the surface impacts of conventional underground mining. As in any leaching operation, stope leaching requires hydrologic site charact
Jan 1, 2010
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Slurry Transport Properties of Graded Coal WasteBy Robert W. McKibbin
The Bureau of Mines conducted laboratory tests to determine the slurry transport and deposition properties of coal waste. A 188.5-ft pipe test loop was constructed with instruments to measure density,
Jan 1, 1983
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RI 4626 Investigation Of The Tem Piute Tungsten Deposit Lincoln County, Nev.By Binyon E. O.
The tungsten properties of Lincoln Mines, Inc., and North Tem Piute Mining and Development Co. were first explored by the Bureau of Mines in 1942. Work on the project comprised trenching, sampling, a
Jan 1, 1950
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IC 7684 A Third Of A Century Of LP-Gas Sales, 1922-52 ? IntroductionBy A. T. Coumbe
The first survey 3/ covering sales of liquefied petroleum gases was made in 1930 by the Bureau of Mines, which at the time was under the United States Department of Commerce. This original canvass cov
Jan 1, 1954
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RI 6275 The Hydrocyclone In Clay BeneficiationBy H. E. Powell
This study was made to determine the capabilities and limitations of the hydrocyclone for separating quartz sand from impure clays, Optimum operating conditions for beneficiating typical subgrade clay
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 5725 Ultimate Composition Of Organic Material In Green River Oil Shale ? Summary And IntroductionBy John Ward Smith
This paper describes and evaluates a method that the Federal Bureau of Mines used to determine the ultimate composition of the organic material in 10 samples of oil shale from the Mahogany zone of the
Jan 1, 1961
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IC 8446 Demand And Supply Of Molybdenum In The United StatesBy Carl L. Bieniewski
U.S. molybdenum production increased fivefold from 18.2 million pounds in 1946 to 90.5 million pounds in 1966, and constituted 87.3 percent of the total free world supply in the 1946-66 period. Mining
Jan 1, 1970
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RI 5260 Carbonization Characteristics Of Some North-Central United States Lignites ? Summary And ConclusionsBy J. J. Hoeppner
Lignite samples were collected so as to be widely representative of the extensive deposits in the western north-central area. These were carbonized at temperatures ranging from 450° to 550° C., accord
Jan 1, 1956