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IC 9364 A UNIX Workstation Monitoring System For Coal-Bump ResearchBy J. P. Coughlin
The U.S. Bureau of Mines has developed a monitoring system that acquires and analyzes data for use in determining the conditions that may precede mountain bumps in coal mines. Based on a UNIX workstat
Jan 1, 1993
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RI 3098 A General Review of BOM Stream Pollution InvestigationBy R. D. Leitch
"REASONS FOR AND PURPOSE OF WORKIn 1924 the United States Public Health Service was requested to undertake a special study of stream pollution. At that time the proposal that the United States Bureau
Apr 1, 1931
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RI 2531 Effect Of Cooling Systems On Evaporation Losses Of Gasoline. ? IntroductionBy Ludwig Schmidt
The consumption of gasoline in the United States varies materially with the seasons; during some of the summer months it exceeds the rate of production and in the other seasons the production of gasol
Jan 1, 1923
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IC 7046 Safe Storage, Handling, And Use Of Commercial ExplosivesBy D. Harrington
An explosive may be defined as a substance (usually a mixture) that has the property of yielding, readily to combustion or oxidation upon application of flame or shock, the combustion or oxidation pro
Jan 1, 1939
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RI 7118 Tungsten Whiskers By Vapor-Phase GrowthBy A. G. Starliper
Laboratory studies were made to produce whiskers of tungsten over a wide range of operating temperatures. Hydrogen reduction of tungsten hexachloride in a vacuum furnace at temperatures from 2,700
Jan 1, 1968
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IC 8983 Improved Personnel Access For Surface Mining EquipmentBy Dennis A. Long
Slip and fall accidents are a major cause of lost-time injuries associated with large mobile equipment in surface mines. An evaluation of the safety hazards associated with getting on and off large su
Jan 1, 1984
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RI 3359 Permissible Methane DetectorsBy L. C. IlsLey
The last previous Bureau of Mines publication relative to details of permissible methane detectors (Bulletin 331, published in 1930) describes detectors of four different types, namely flame, combusti
Jan 1, 1937
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RI 6599 Magnesium Reduction Of RutileBy H. Dolezal
An investigation was made on the use of magnesium for the direct reduction of rutile to make low-cost, offgrade titanium which could be upgraded to an acceptable grade of metal by electrorefining. Red
Jan 1, 1965
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IC 7638 Recommendations For Improved Shuttle-Car-Haulage Safety ? SummaryBy D. S. Kingery
Investigations over several years have disclosed that the principal manners of occurrence of shuttle-car injuries are in order: 1. Victims in contact with roof or crossbars. 2. Victims in contac
Jan 1, 1952
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RI 6661 Electron-Beam Melting Of YttriumBy W. E. Anable
The Bureau of Mines studied the purification of commercially available yttrium by melting it in a 100-kw electron-beam furnace. Button-scale melts were made to determine the ultimate purification that
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 7466 A Comparison Of Sublimation And Vaporization For Purification Of Samarium MetalBy J. E. Murphy
Purification of samarium metal by sublimation and by vaporization from a low-melting metal flux, at the same temperature, were compared. Vaporization proved more effective for removing impurities such
Jan 1, 1970
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RI 9154 Stiffness Characteristics of Longwall ShieldsBy Thomas M. Barczak
he stiffness characteristics of longwall shields were investigated in this Bureau of Mines study. Since longwall strata activity is characterized by roof-to-floor and face-to-waste displacements, a mo
Jan 1, 1988
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RI 2134 Stiff Hats for the Protection of Miners against Falling RockBy C. Lorimar Colburn
"The use of helmets during the war has accentuated interest in the advisability of using stiff hats in mines to protect the miners against falling rocks. About forty per cent of the accidents in mines
Jun 1, 1920
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IC 8604 Gold-Lode Deposits, Fairbanks Mining District, Central AlaskaBy Bruce I. Thomas
The Fairbanks mining district forms an arc 40 miles long and 8 miles wide on the north side of the Tanana Valley in central Alaska. This is a region of broad valleys and rounded hills that range in el
Jan 1, 1973
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RI 2237 Some Factors Affecting Losses Of Coal In MiningBy George S. Rice
"It is well known that the lost coal left in the ground in mining, under such conditions that recovery is practically impossible, constitutes a large proportion of the coal in the beds worked. A recen
Apr 1, 1921
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RI 6545 An Apparatus for Determining the Helium Content of Gas MixturesBy D. E. Emerson, C. G. Kirkland, E. M. Frost
An apparatus has been developed for determining the helium content of gases containing 40 percent or more helium . It utilizes activated coconut charcoal at liquid nitrogen temperatures to adsorb cons
Jan 1, 1964
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Safety Breakthrough - Reduced Exposure Mining System (REMS) - Executive SummaryBy J. J. McClelland
The face area of a continuous mining section of an underground coal mine is the most dangerous area in the mine. Workers there are at nearly twice the risk of death or disabling injury than those in o
Jan 1, 1994
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RI 6067 A Method Of Determining Dynamic Tensile Strength Of Rock At Minimum Loading ? SummaryBy L. O. Bacon
This Bureau of Mines report summarizes the results of laboratory work in the design of instrumentation for obtaining the dynamic tensile strength of rock at minimum loading. Minimum loading is defined
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 7729 Methods And Evaluation Of Explosive Fracturing In Oil ShaleBy J. S. Miller
The Bureau of Mines developed methods for fragmenting oil shale formations with chemical explosives to prepare oil shale for in situ retorting and to evaluate the extent of fragmentation by various me
Jan 1, 1973
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RI 3851 Continuous Hydraulic Classification: Constitution of the Teeter Column throughout its DepthBy G. Dale Cor, Will H. Coghill, M. F. Williams, I. L. Feld
"INTRODUCTION During the past several years the Southern Experiment Station of the Bureau of Mines, with the cooperation of the University of Alabama, has given attention to hydraulic classification.
Jan 1, 1946