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RI 2875 Accident-Severity Rates For Certain Mines & Quarries In 1927.By W. W. Adams
During the calendar year 1927 the United States Bureau f Mines conducted, for the third consecutive year, a safety contest among more than 250 mines and quarries. Aside from its underlying purpose to
Jan 1, 1928
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IC 7597 Treatment Of Timber ? General InformationBy F. S. Crawford
Untreated timber in a mine or elsewhere may fail prematurely because it may "rot out before it wears out." If such timber is treated with a satisfactory preservative, decay will be retarded for many y
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 5078 Beneficiation Of A Brazilian Phosphate Rock ? IntroductionBy M. M. Fine
A satisfactory mean: of beneficiating a Brazilian phosphate rock was developed in a mineral-dressing-research study by the Bureau of Mines. High-grade concentrates well ever the specified minimum grad
Jan 1, 1954
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RI 2824 Analyses Of Crude Oils From The Seminole District, Oklahoma ? IntroductionBy A. J. Kraemer
The Bureau of Mines for a number of years has been carrying on an investigation of properties of crude petroleum from producing, fields in the United States and the Western Hemisphere, and has publish
Jan 1, 1927
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RI 8609 Beneficiation of High-Magnesium Phosphate From Southern FloridaBy T. O. Llewellyn
The Bureau of Mines, as part of its goal to develop technology that can conserve domestic mineral resources investigated beneficiation methods for recovering phosphate minerals from two Southern Flori
Jan 1, 1981
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IC 6919 Some Suggestions On The Prevention Of Electrical Accidents In Coal MinesBy D. Harrington
Near the close of the nineteenth century electricity was introduced underground, and the mining industry automatically was confronted with another potential source of fatalities and injuries to mine w
Jan 1, 1936
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RI 2599 Radio As A Method For Underground Communication In MinesBy J. J. Jakosky
"This report is the second of a series dealing with electrical methods of underground communication nd signalling, and is a discussion of some of the factors involved in -applying radio in mines.A pre
Apr 1, 1924
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Minor Metals - Arsenic (e4588a90-3112-48ec-96e1-69ab226be863)By Gertrude N. Greenspoon
Legislation and Government Programs.-The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) held public hearings in early 1975 on proposed standards for exposure to inorganic arsenic. The findings o
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 7163 Evaluation Of The Explosive-Anchored Rock BoltBy John B. Shutack
In an effort to improve the performance of the explosive-anchored rock bolt, the Bureau of Mines studied the effect of the detonation velocity of the explosive and type of charge (linear or nonlinear)
Jan 1, 1968
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RI 7031 Developing A Thermochemical Model For The Iron Blast Furnace - Measurement Of Rate Coefficient For Reduction Of Iron Ore Pellets In A Packed BedBy Hillary W. St. Clair
The effective coefficient for rate of reduction of a sample of granular iron ore may be determined by passing the reducing gas through a bed of the are at constant flow rate and periodically analyzing
Jan 1, 1967
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Improved Three-Component Borehole Gage For Measuring Stress In Mines - ObjectiveTo improve the reliability of the Bureau developed bore-hole gage now widely used to determine the absolute state of stress in rock. Approach Use the knowledge gained by extensive field tests to
Jan 1, 1982
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Electron Spin Resonance Detection of Reactive Free Radicals in Fresh Coal Dust and Quartz Dust and Its Implications to Pneumoconiosis and SilicosisBy N. S. Dalal, B. Jafari, X. Shi, M. M. Suryan
"It is well known that prevalence and severity of coal worker's pneumoconiosis (CWP) differ markedly in different regions and mines despite comparable exposures. These variations in the pathogenicity
Mar 1, 1989
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RI 7721 Phase-Contrast Enhancement Without Spatial Filters For Seismic HolographyBy G. L. Fitzpatrick
Future applications of seismic holography to "seismically transparent phase objects," such as rock inclusions, fracture zones, liquid-filled cavities, etc., will require techniques to improve the poor
Jan 1, 1973
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Expert System For Determining The Spontaneous Combustion Potential Of Coal - ObjectivePredict the spontaneous combustion potential of a coal, using an expert system computer program. Background Approximately 15% of underground coal mint fires in the United States are attributed t
Jan 1, 1992
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RI 4711 Improvements In Methods For Preparing Thin Sections Of RockBy Harold L. Gibbs
The purpose of this paper is to encourage petrographers to prepare thin sections, as the demand for microscopic examination of rocks, ores, and metallurgical products is becoming more general in .the
Jan 1, 1950
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IC 7260 Supplementing Anthracite With Other Fuels For Home Heating - SummaryBy W. T. Reid
A shortage of anthracite for home heating indicates the necessity of using other fuels for this purpose; low-volatile bituminous, or "soft" coal is the most feasible supplementary fuel, either burned
Jan 1, 1943
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IC 9057 Evaluation Of Sensitive Ground Fault Interrupters For Coal MinesBy Michael R. Yenchek
Contacts with energized conductors are a major cause of electrocutions in underground coal mines. Sensitive ground fault interrupters (GFI's) installed on in-mine three-phase ac utilization circu
Jan 1, 1985
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RI 7766 Radical Species Profiles For A Methane-Oxygen-Argon FlameBy Charles P. Lazzara
Concentration profiles of low-pressure, slightly lean CH4-02-Ar flames have been measured in situ for the following unstable species: oxygen atom, hydrogen atom, hydroxyl radical, methyl radical, and
Jan 1, 1973
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RI 4873 Ignition Of Coal Dust By Permissible ExplosivesBy Irving Hartmann
When permissible explosives are used in coal mines according to the procedure recommended by the Bureau of Mines they are relatively safe, and no mine explosions are known to have resulted from this t
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 4873 Ignition of Coal Dust by Permissible Explosives (c123dee0-6517-4c0e-b90c-1453a7810979)By Irving Hartmann, F. P. Christofel, John Nagy, E. B. McGibbeny
"INTRODUCTION When permissible explosives are used in c procedure recommended by the Bureau of Mines 5/ they are relatively safe, and, no mine explosions are known to have resulted from this type of b
Apr 1, 1952