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RI 5017 Reconnaissance Of The Cartersville Manganese Deposits, Bartow County, Ga. ? Introduction And SummaryBy J. F. Neill, O&apos
[The Cartersville mining district is in Bartow County, Ga., about 40 miles northwest of Atlanta. Barite, limonite, ocher, amber, hematite, and, manganese oxide ores have been produced from the strict
Jan 1, 1954
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RI 6883 Stratigraphic And Geographic Variation Of Shale-Oil Specific Gravity From Colorado's Green River FormationBy John Ward Smith
Variations in specific gravity of oil retorted from oil shales of the Eocene Green River Formation in northwestern Colorado were evaluated statistically, demonstrating that these variations are very s
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 5815 Explosibility Of Coal Dust In An Atmosphere Containing A Low Percentage Of Methane ? SummaryBy John Nagy
The effect of low percentages of methane (0 to 5 pet.) in an air atmosphere on spark initiated explosions of coal dust was investigated. With low dust concentrations (0.1 to 0.4 oz./cu, ft.), small am
Jan 1, 1961
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IC 9286 Cobalt Availability : A Minerals Availability AppraisalBy D. G. Willard
The U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Mines has evaluated the potential resource and annual availability of cobalt from 27 deposits or districts in 11 market-economy countries. More than 95 pct o
Jan 1, 1991
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Studies Of The Extraction And Coking Of Coal And Their Significance In Relation To Its Structure - SummaryBy M. Orchin
THIS PAPER is concerned with two aspects of the behavior of coal: (1) Dispersion by solvents atmospheric pressure and high temperature and (2) the destruction and regeneration of the coking properties
Jan 1, 1951
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RI 6829 Reaction Of Coal In Argon And Argon-Hydrogen PlasmasBy Walter Kawa
Coals of various rank were reacted by the Bureau of Nines in plasma jets generated from argon and argon-hydrogen mixtures containing up to 33 volume-percent hydrogen. Average plasma temperatures range
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 3186 Sand and Gravel Safety Contest of 1931By W. W. Adams
"The third annual safety contest for plants producing sand and gravel, which was conducted in 1911 by the United States Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the National Sand and Gravel Association, re
Aug 1, 1932
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RI 6181 A Replica Electron Microscopic Method For Measuring Knoop Hardness IndentationsBy Charles W. Huggins
Knoop hardness indentations were studied and measured with the electron microscope on TiB2, HfC, and A1B12 crystals. A detailed description of replicating the indentations using collodion and Faxfilm
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 5352 Laboratory Evaluation Of Water Additives For Petroleum Displacement ? Introduction And SummaryBy H. N. Dunning
A comprehensive production research program, now in progress at the Petroleum Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines at Bartlesville, Okla., includes studies of the displacement of petroleum from s
Jan 1, 1957
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RI 3377 Primary Crushing - Progress Report No. 1 ? IntroductionBy Mark Sheppard
[Considerable research work has been done on secondary crushing and coarse rued fine grinding, and the literature on the general subject of crushing contains many references to the work of investigato
Jan 1, 1938
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RI 6354 Comparison of Properties of Coke ProducedBy G. W. Birge, D. E. Wolfson, J. G. Walters
Seventeen samples were carbonized by the BM -AGA pilot - plant test method and in industrial ovens . Chemical and physical properties of the samples were determined , and the physical properties of th
Jan 1, 1964
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IC 8014 Tungsten Deposits In Utah ? Introduction And SummaryBy F. D. Everett
The Federal Bureau of Mines reviewed the status of tungsten deposits of Utah in 1959. Industrial requirements of tungsten during emergencies have exceeded the domestic supply, and a knowledge of the s
Jan 1, 1961
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RI 7813 Analysis of Factors Influencing Fracture Initiation and Orientation in Oil Reservoir SandstoneBy C. A. Komar
Laboratory-scale hydraulic fracture tests were conducted by the Bureau of Mines on directionally oriented sandstone material, along with measurements of directional rock properties such as tensile str
Jan 1, 1973
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RI 8354 Model Coal Tunnel Fires In Ventilation FlowBy Robert F. Chaiken
The Bureau of Mines is using model ducts lined with coal to study the nature of coal mine fires, their rate of propagation, their influence on ventilation airflows, and their response to sealing and o
Jan 1, 1979
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RI 5681 Combustion Of North Dakota Lignite In Domestic Heaters ? Summary And ConclusionsBy W. H. Oppelt
The Federal Bureau of Mines investigated combustion of lignite in domes-tic heating equipment to obtain information on equipment performance and to evaluate testing procedures. Three types of domestic
Jan 1, 1960
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RI 5123 Low-Temperature Carbonization Of Coal And Lignite For Industrial Uses ? IntroductionBy V. F. Parry
The major industrial uses of char or semicoke produced by low-temperature carbonization of coal4/ are as fuel for generating electric power, for blending with metallurgical coking coal as a substitute
Jan 1, 1955
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IC 8541 Methods For Evaluating Explosives And Hazardous MaterialsBy C. M. Mason
The methods currently used by the Bureau of Mines to evaluate the sensitivity, strength, incendivity, gaseous products, and physical properties of explosives and hazardous chemicals are described. Inc
Jan 1, 1972
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RI 8151 Applying Computer-Drawn Maps of Geologic Data to Analysis of Mining ProblemsBy Charles M. McCulloch
This Bureau of Mines report discusses the principles of using computers to draw maps and plot geologic data of mining areas. The types of maps that can be drawn by a computer are reviewed, using as ex
Jan 1, 1976
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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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RI 9473 Use of Oxygen-Enriched Gas for the Oxidation of Acid and Fluxed Taconite PelletsBy Larry A. Haas
The U.S. Bureau of Mines, in cooperation with Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc. (Hibbing, MN), investigated ways of enhancing the quality (compressive strength, after-tumble and reducibility) of domestic acid an
Jan 1, 1993