Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Shear Strength Evaluation of Clay-Rock MixturesBy Anthony T. Xannacchione, Luis E. Vallejo
At present, there is little knowledge concerning the shear strength of clays containing floating rock particles with concentrations from 0 to 30%. In practice, the effect of rock particles is typicall
-
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.
-
IC 8395 Analyses Of Natural Gases, 1967 ? IntroductionBy B. J. Moore
This publication contains routine analyses and related source data for 547 natural gas samples from 22 States and three foreign countries. Of this total, 340 samples were collected during calendar yea
Jan 1, 1968
-
RI 3885 Exploration of Red Mtn. Chromite Deposits - Kenai Peninsula, AKBy F. A. Rutledge
"The chromite deposits of Red Mountain, 10,miles southeast of Seldovia, Alaska, are in an intrusive of ultramafic rocks. The earliest reference to the deposits was made by U.S. Grant3/; J.B. Mertic, J
Apr 1, 1946
-
RI 8296 Preconcentration of Native Copper Ore by Electronic SortingBy V. R. Miller
The Bureau of Mines developed and evaluated a detecting and sorting device to separate the copper-bearing portion from the barren portion of Michigan native copper ore in the minus 4- plus 1-inch size
Jan 1, 1978
-
IC 9513 - Proceedings Of The Second American Conference On Human VibrationThere is a saying, ?If it moves, it vibrates.? This is especially true in our modern industrial environments, where workers use powered tools, machinery, vehicles, and heavy equipment. How workers are
Jun 1, 2009
-
Wetting Behavior of Coal in the Presence of Some Nonionic Surfactants (ce6ee6ec-0fef-485e-91ae-9168e0c80548)By B. R. Mohal, F. F. Aplan, S. Chander
"The wetting behavior of coal has been determined in the presence of nonyl and octyl series of nonionic surfactants containing polyethoxy groups of different sizes. The wetting behavior was determined
Jan 1, 1989
-
OFR-66-93 Regulatory Aspects Of Submarine Tailings Disposal - The Quartz Hill Case HistoryBy C. A. Hesse
The Quartz Hill Molybdenum Project, In Southeast Alaska, was the first mining project to attempt the permitting of a submarine tailings disposal system in the United States, since the passage of the N
Jan 1, 1993
-
OFR-200-83 Floodplain Landfill With Mill TailingsBy K. E. Robinson
This study is the extension of an investigation of reclamation of floodplain areas in the Coeur d'Alene Mining District, Idaho, that are unuseable in their natural condition, by construction of l
Jan 1, 1983
-
RI 5951 Chemical Reactions In The Electric Arc: Reactive Metal Carbides - SummaryBy E. D. Calvert
This Bureau of Mines report discusses the electric-arc reduction of zirconium and hafnium oxides with carbon yielding a metal-metallic carbide mixture. The carbon to oxide ratio in the feed determines
Jan 1, 1962
-
IC 9204 Characterization Of The 1986 Nonmetallic Mining WorkforceBy Shail J. Butani
In 1986 the Bureau of Mines conducted a probability sample survey, Mining Industry Population Survey, to measure such employee characteristics as occupation; principal equipment operated; work locatio
Jan 1, 1988
-
In Situ Measurement Of Rock Stress With Hydraulic Borehole Pressure Cells ? ObjectiveDevelop a new technique of in situ rock stress measurement which can be used when and where the conventional methods, such as the overcoring stress relief methods and the hydrofracturing method, canno
Jan 1, 1988
-
RI 7774 Sulfur Dioxide Emission Control By Hydrogen Sulfide Reaction In Aqueous Solution - The Citrate SystemBy J. B. Rosenbaum
Prolonged laboratory and limited pilot plant tests have shown that the Bureau of Mines buffered S02 -H2S process is capable of removing 95 to 99 percent of the S02 from industrial waste gases. Most of
Jan 1, 1973
-
RI 3615 Analysis Of Power Consumption At Coal Mines - 1. Preliminary Study ? IntroductionBy F. A. Jones
Increased mechanization .of coal mines has emphasized the need for study of actual power requirements of the various machines employed in the production of coal and losses in the distribution of power
Jan 1, 1942
-
RI 5987 Columbium-Vanadium Binary Alloys For High-Temperature Service ? SummaryBy H. R. Babitzke
The purpose of this investigation was to develop an alloy of columbium for use at high temperatures and for nuclear applications. The properties of possible alloys were determined, and the more promis
Jan 1, 1962
-
RI 3345 Permissible Electrically Operated Rock-Dust Distributors ? Introduction (6b9ba481-2913-4300-a3ee-fd52b983a832)The general nature of the special constructional features that are required to provide safety from explosion hazards on machines approved as permissible by the Bureau of Mines is fairly well known to
Jan 1, 1937
-
Bulletin 11 The Purchase Of Coal By The Government Under SpecificationsBy GEORGE S. POPE
This bulletin is the third of a series a showing the results of ment purchases of coal according to specifications as to its quality and giving typical forms of proposals for supplying coal and genera
Jan 1, 1910
-
RI 3615 Analysis Of Power Consumption At Coal Mines - 1. Preliminary Study ? Introduction (1f54ba71-4451-444f-bdbf-69c9bdcc0c89)By F. A. Jones
Increased mechanization .of coal mines has emphasized the need for study of actual power requirements of the various machines employed in the production of coal and losses in the distribution of power
Jan 1, 1942
-
RI 8135 Thermal History of Rock Dust Particles in a Gas Flame Preheat ZoneBy Henry E. Perlee
In a Bureau of Mines study two-dimensional mathematical equations were solved that describe the transient thermal response of a rock dust particle in a cloud of similar particles in a gas flame's
Jan 1, 1976
-
RI 3038 Survey of Fuel Consumption at Refineries in 1929By G. R. Hopkins
"Refiners are generally considered solely as fuel producers, but actually they also comprise a group one of the largest consumers of fuel. For example, during the year 1929 the refineries-burned 51,54
Sep 1, 1930