Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Soil Characteristics And Natural Field ConditionsThis section contains a summary of our investigation of the soil conditions (type, porosity, moisture content, etc.) at the two sites (Lanse and Kato, Pennsylvania) selected for field testing of latex
Jan 1, 1972
-
OFR-3(1)-75 Design And Development Of Protective Canopies For Underground Low Coal Electric Face Equipment, Including Shuttle CarsBy R. Farrar
Protective canopies for conventional electric face equipment, including shuttle cars, operating in low coal (less than 48 inches) were designed, fabricated, installed and evaluated on in-mine machines
Jan 1, 2012
-
RI 4934 Analyses of Tipple & Delivered Samples of Coal, 1951By C. P. Haller, S. J. Aresco
"INTRODUCTION The Bureau of Mines has been active in promoting the purchase of coal for Government use under specifications that define the requirements in terms of heat¬ing value of the coal, express
Feb 1, 1953
-
IC 8337 Injury Experience In The Metallic Mineral Industries, 1961-63By Forrest T. Moyer
The overall injury experience, excluding officeworkers, at metal mines and mills during the period 1961-63, reported by operators, was 174 fatal and 11,357 nonfatal disabling work injuries during an a
Jan 1, 1967
-
IC 6810 Progress In Safety In Coal Mining In The United StatesBy D. Harrington
During the 5-year period 1906-10 inclusive, 84 major disasters (a major disaster being one in which 5 or more lives are lost) occurred in the coal mines of the United States, or an average of 17 per y
Jan 1, 1934
-
RI 3729 Effects of Desulfurization on the Lead Susceptibility of Distillates from Some Crude Oils from Texas, New Mexico, and OklahomaBy M. C. Simmons, Boyd Gutorie
Desulfurization experiments at the Petroleum Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Bartlesville on virgin light distillates obtained from some ‘high-sulfur’ crude oils have shown that the octan
Nov 1, 1943
-
Rock Mass Behavior and Support Response in a Longwall Panel Pre-Driven Recovery RoomBy Stephen C. Tadolini, Thomas M. Barczak
An underground investigation was designed and implemented by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) to evaluate the effectiveness of pre-driven longwall recovery rooms suppo
-
Handle Design For Optimal Hand FunctionBy Stephen L. Tillim
Tubular Handles can negatively affect the contents of the carpal tunnel. Years of injuries from grasping handles for tools and machines can cause carpal tunnel syndrome, tendonitis and wrist joint in
Jan 6, 2006
-
Examination Of Group Behavior During Mine Fire EscapesIt is suggested in chapter 1 that emergency activities (including escape) are not individualistic. They tend to be group responses. If escapes from mine fires are group activities, then preparation fo
Jan 1, 2000
-
Technology Transfer (5ba8a74b-ef04-4afb-bca6-57c0afc4bc82)"Research on the control of exposure to respirable contaminants in mine atmospheres is conducted in five areas; 1) control of dust generation, 2) dilution, dispersion and collection of dust in mine ai
Aug 31, 1989
-
RI 2883 Retreatment of Comstock TailingsBy J. A. Woolf, E. S. Leaver
"So much has been written on the ore genesis of the Comstock Lode that it is sufficient here to describe the original ores as consisting chiefly of quartz and some calcite. In places .a considerable a
Jul 1, 1928
-
IC 6435 Safety cars of the US Bureau of MminesBy M. J. Ankeny, J. J. Forbes
"One of the main functions of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, as authorized by Congress, is to investigate safety and health conditions, to disseminate information regarding safe and unsafe practices in mi
Mar 1, 1931
-
RI 2773 Accident - Severity Rates For Certain Metal MinesBy W. W. Adams
"During the calendar year 1925 the Bureau of Mines received from the operators of several hundred mines and quarries complete accident records covering deaths, permanent disabilities, and “lost time”
Sep 1, 1926
-
RI 2964 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1928By C. R. Hopkins
"The petroleum refiners of the United States made rapid strides in fuel economy in 1928, when the calculated number of B. t. u. required to refine a barrel of crude petroleum was 637,000 as compared w
Nov 1, 1929
-
The Surface Mining Control And Reclamation ActSMCRA contains five principal regulatory provisions that form the basis for its implementation: Performance Standards Performance standard safe intended to ensure that all surface mining is conduc
Jan 1, 1992
-
IC 6396 Sources and Distribution of Major Petroleum Products, Atlantic Coast States 1929By E. B. Swanson
Atlantic seaboard refining and marketing companies , dependent largely upon other producing and refining areas for the crude and refined petroleum needed to meet the demand for petroleum products with
Nov 1, 1930
-
Electromagnetic Through-The-Earth Mine Communications - IntroductionPart Two of this report is based upon six working memoranda prepared during the first half of 1972 at an early stage in our work for the Bureau of Mines. This work presents preliminary performance est
Jan 1, 1974
-
IC 9132 A Statistical Analysis of Metal and Nonmetal Mine Fire Incidents in the United States from 1950 to 1984By William H. Pomroy, Shail J. Butani
"This Bureau of Mines publication presents a statistical analysis of official U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) metal and nonmetal mine fire reports from 1950 through 1984, plus accoun
Jan 1, 1986
-
Mining Disasters Caused and Controlled by Mankind: The Case for Coal Mining and Other Minerals - Part 2: Control of Mining DisastersBy R. V. Ramani
"In Part 1 of this paper, published in the August 1995 issue of Natural Resources Forum, a review of several mining disasters around the world established the complex nature of their causation and the
Dec 1, 1996
-
IC 6009 Gases Commonly Used in the Industries and the Home and Their HazardsBy A. C. Fieldner
"Gas hazards may be divided into two principal classes- namely (1) inflammation and explosions; (2) asphyxiation and poisoning. Inflammation and explosion are prevented first by adequate ventilation s
Jun 1, 1926