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IC 7056 Reducing "Nipping" Hazards When Tramming Coal-Mining MachineryBy E. J. Gleim
In the movement of self-controlled direct-current machinery, particularly shortwall cutting, machines, from one place to another in coal mires, "nipping" or it stinging" has been practiced quite commo
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 8266 Dry-Process-Sprayed Coal Mine Sealants, An Updated Progress ReportBy Jack E. Fraley
The Bureau of Mines has successfully developed and tested a machine for spraying sealant onto coal mine roof and ribs. Dry material is transported pneumatically to a water-adding nozzle designed to pr
Jan 1, 1978
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RI 8073 Drillability Determination-A Drillability Index for Percussion DrillsBy Sathit Tandanand
This Bureau of Mines report describes the method of obtaining a strength index for rock drillability, particularly for percussion drills. The original Protodyakonov method has been slightly modified,
Jan 1, 1975
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OFR-115-77 Test Of Inclined Roof Bolts & Analysis Of Their Effectiveness In Roof Control In Coal Mines ? II. SummaryUnder the Bureau of Mines Research Contract Number H0252071, Foundation Sciences, Inc. has compared the relative effectiveness of roof bolts installed at an angle over the rib with that of bolts insta
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 3224 Classification And Tabling Of Alabama Red Iron Ores ? IntroductionBy B. W. Gandrud
In 1927 Coghill5 showed that there is considerable liberation of the iron oxide mineral from gangue when the Alabama red iron ores are ground to a size suitable for classification and tabling, but tha
Jan 1, 1934
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IC 8930 Copper Availability - Market Economy Countries - A Minerals Availability Program AppraisalBy R. D. Rosenkranz
The Bureau of Mines has investigated the availability of copper from 272 deposits in market economy countries. The deposits studied have demonstrated resources totaling 413 million metric tons of cont
Jan 1, 1983
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IC 9316 The History And Future Of Longwall Mining In The United StatesBy Thomas M. Barczak
This U.S. Bureau of Mines report chronicles the historical development of longwall mining in the United States and speculates on future developments to the turn of the century. The involvement and con
Jan 1, 1992
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OFR-105(5)-84 Ground And Air Vibrations Caused By Surface Blasting. Volume 5 Air Vibrations: Monitoring And Predictor AssessmentBy Clayton R. Morlock
Airblasts have been monitored at four coal strip mines and at a limestone quarry. Thirty-seven production blasts have been monitored with three seismographs, resulting in one hundred and eleven comple
Jan 1, 1983
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RI 8831 Alumina Miniplant Operations-Separation of Aluminum Chloride Liquor From Leach Residue by Horizontal Belt FiltrationBy Dwight L. Sawyer, Roy T. Sorensen
The Bureau of Mines has investigated the recovery of alumina by hydrochloric acid leaching of calcined kaolinitic clay . Bench- scale studies indicated that horizontal belt filtration was a pprraacctt
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 2104 Engineering Aspects of the Petroleum IndustryBy Earl W. Waay
"Since the beginning of the petroleum industry in 1839, up to within two or three years ago, these has been a dearch of engineers who have had the fundamental technical training also sufficient practi
Apr 1, 1920
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Bulletin 79 Abstracts of Current Decisions on Mines and MiningBy J. W. Thompson
CONSTRUCTION OF STATUTE-SALE BY ENTRYMAN. The timber and stone act (20 Stat., 89) does not forbid an entryman from alienating his interest in his claim; but the act makes illegal any prior agreement b
Jan 1, 1914
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RI 6775 Reduction Roasting-Acid Solution Techniques In Laboratory Processing Of Minnesota Manganiferous OresBy P. L. Weston
The Bureau of Mines used high-temperature reduction roasting, magnetic separation, acid-leaching, and autoclave precipitation processes to recover iron and manganese from brown Cuyana range ores of Mi
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 9570 - Hazards of Conveyor Belt FiresBy Frank J. Perzak
This report describes a U.S. Bureau of Mines study on the hazards of large-scale conveyor belt fires in underground coal mines, as a function of both air velocity and distance from belt surface to gal
Jan 1, 2010
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RI 8515 - Direct Method Determination of the Gas Content of Coal: Procedures and ResultsBy W. P. Diamond, J. R. Levine
The explosion hazard of methane-air mixtures has become an increasingly serious mine planning problem, and an advance assessment of methane gas potential can therefore be essential for a safe and econ
Jan 1, 1980
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OFR-74(2)-80 Hazardous Surface Openings To Abandoned Underground Mines - Black Hills National Forest - Vol. II: Appendix C - Abandoned Mine Identification - Area ABy L. A. Stinnett
An investigation of hazardous surface openings of abandoned and inactive underground mines in the Black Hills area of South Dakota has revealed: (1) tracing legal ownership of mineral claims via count
Jan 1, 1979
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IC 9228 Surface Testing And Evaluation Of The Multiple-Unit Continuous Haulage SystemBy Jasinder S. Jaspal
Most of the underground coal in the United States is mined via room-and-pillar mining methods with continuous miners. These machines operate intermittently because they have to wait for shuttle cars t
Jan 1, 1989
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RI 3698 Work of the Safety Division, Fiscal Year 1942By R. R. Sayers
A series of coal- mine catastrophes in the latter part of the first decade of this century focused public attention on the need for safety in mines and resulted in the establishment of the Federal Bur
Apr 1, 1943
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RI 9518 - Microwave Heating of Chemicals and MineralsBy S. L. McGill
The U.S. Bureau of Mines has determined the microwave heating rates for a suite of minerals and reagent-grade compounds. Maximum temperature achieved for the samples and the time required to reach tem
Jan 1, 2010
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RI 7249 Five-Piece Concrete Sets For Small Mine Openings: A Progress ReportBy K. R. Dorman
To further investigate the potential of precast concrete sets as a support medium for underground mines, the Bureau of Mines designed a five-piece precast concrete drift set for a small opening and te
Jan 1, 1969
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RI 7379 Continuous Heavy Liquid Concentration Of SpodumeneBy R. B. Tippin
To study continuous operation of the heavy liquid separation (HLS) of minerals, the Bureau of Mines concentrated spodumene from a typical ore. The studies included heavy liquid concentration, removal
Jan 1, 1970