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RI 9205 Subsidence Due to Undermining of Sloping Terrain: A Case StudyBy Paul W. Jeran
Subsidence over a series of longwall panels undermining sloping terrain in southwestern Pennsylvania was monitored to verify the Bureau of Mines subsidence prediction model for the northern Appalachia
Jan 1, 1988
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IC 7672 Regeneration Of Spent Pickle Liquor ? SummaryBy B. P. Martinez
A process for regenerating spent pickle liquor is proposed in which some of the water is evaporated at atmospheric pressure and ferrous sulfate is precipitated as monohydrate crystals..Equilibrium con
Jan 1, 1953
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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 5301 A Mineral-Dressing Study Of Manganese Deposits Of The Batesville, Ark., District ? SummaryBy M. M. Fine
This report presents the results of laboratory mineral-dressing investigations by the Bureau of Mines of 14 individual or composite character samples from deposits in the Batesville manganese district
Jan 1, 1957
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RI 5407 Spectrographic Determination Of Beryllium In A Variable Matrix - SummaryBy E. E. Creitz
Application of the usual chemical methods to the determination of beryllium in the mineral-dressing products of a spodumene pegmatite was found to be unsatisfactory as to speed, accuracy, sensitivity,
Jan 1, 1958
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RI 8176 Flame and Pressure Development of Large-Scale CH4-Air-N2 Explosions - Buoyancy Effects and Venting RequirementsBy M. J. Sapko
The pressure and flame development of the methane-air-nitrogen system was investigated in the Bureau's l2-foot-diameter sphere to define buoyancy effects and to develop relationships for predicti
Jan 1, 1976
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IC 6790 Asbestos-Domestic and Foreign DepositsBy Oliver Bowles
The United States has never attained importance as a producer of asbestos, the domestic output being only 1 to 3 percent of the quantity required to supply raw material for its extensive asbestos-prod
Jun 1, 1934
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RI 7606 The Effect Of Atmospheric Pressures On The Oxygen Level In A Sealed MineBy N. N. Moebs
The atmosphere in part of an air-sealed coal mine was monitored continuously through a drill hole for oxygen content to determine the effectiveness of sealing a mine against the entrance of air and th
Jan 1, 1972
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RI 4372 Investigation Of The Nigger Jim Lead Diggings Lafayette County, Wis.By G. A. Apell
The presence of considerable mineralization at the surface together with other favorable conditions suggested inclusion of the Nigger Jim diggings area in a comprehensive study of shallow lead deposit
Jan 1, 1948
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OFR-16(2)-80 User's Guide For A Computer Program For Analytical Modeling Of Rock/Structure InteractionBy Robert D. Ewing
The computer program described in this user's guide provides for the static, three-dimensional, linear and nonlinear analysis of structural and geological systems by the finite element method. Th
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 5642 Oil Recovery And Formation Damage In Permafrost, Umiat Field, Alaska - Summary And ConclusionsBy Oren C. Baptist
Umiat field contains the largest accumulation of oil discovered so far in Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 4 in Arctic Alaska. The Umiat anticline was tested with 11 wells; 6 produced oil in varying quanti
Jan 1, 1960
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IC 8138 Review Of Major Proposed Processes For Recovering Manganese From United States Resources (In Three Parts) 1. Pyrometallurgical ProcessesBy Lindsay D. Norman
Eleven major pyrometallurgical processes and operations suggested for recovering manganese from domestic resources are described. These include seven pyrometallurgical processes that usually yield a f
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 4079 Beneficiation of Chromite Ores from Western United StatesBy T. F. Mitchell, J. V. Batty, R. R. Wells, R. Havens
"INTRODUCTION )ne of the most important wartime activities of the Bureau of Mines was the search for new sources of minerals necessary to the prosecution of the war. As a part of the investigation of
Jun 1, 1947
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Part Three - Estimates Of Miner Location Accuracy: Error Analysis In Seismic Location Procedures For Trapped Miners - I. SummaryBy David C. Peters, Robert S. Crosson
A method of error analysis has been applied to the location technique of non-linear least squares iterative inversion in order to evaluate the resolving power of several seismic array configurations w
Jan 1, 1974
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RI 8993 - Effects of Water on Coal Cutting Forces and Primary Dust DistributionBy Wallace W. Roepke
Research to evaluate the lubricity effects achieved by spraying water on the cutting bit of a mining machine or spraying water on the coal during cutting has shown that neither practice affects cuttin
Jan 1, 1985
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IC 6611 Small-Scale Placer-Mining Methods ? IntroductionBy Chas. F. Jackson
During the current business depression the Bureau of Mines has received many inquiries concerning placer mining, the prospects for men of small means to make wages by small-scale placer operations, th
Jan 1, 1932
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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
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RI 3128 Hydrogen-Sulphide Content of the Gas in Some Producing Oil Fields (6eac3192-3d4c-4853-a20c-ed57dab99868)By C. J. Wilhelm, John M. Devine
"Hydrogen aulphide associated with natural as was noted as early as at Point Albino, Canada. 4 The presence of this impurity was recognized also in other of the earlier oil and gas fields, although th
Sep 1, 1931
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Rock Mass Characterization Of Primary Copper Ore For Caving At The El Teniente Mine, ChileBy Ernesto Villaescusa, Andres Brzovic
Rock masses of the primary copper ore at the El Teniente Mine are very competent and massive. The rock mass contains almost no open discontinuities. Nevertheless, there is a high frequency network of
Jan 5, 2007
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RI 3121 Hydrogen-Sulphide Content Of The Gas In Some Producing Oil Fields ? IntroductionBy John M. Devine
Hydrogen sulphide associated with natural gas was noted as early as 1892, at Point Albino, Canada.4 The presence of this impurity was recognized also in other of the earlier oil and gas fields, althou
Jan 1, 1931