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OFR-113H-93 Coal Mine Injury Analysis: A Model For Reduction Through Training - Volume IX: Training Cost ModelBy R. V. Ramani
One area of study in the Coal Mine Injury Analysis project was to illustrate and enhance the ability of mine safety management personnel to apply analytical techniques to injury experience data and to
Jan 1, 1993
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Investigation Of Pillar-Roof Contact Failure In Northern Appalachian Stone Mine WorkingsBy Gabriel S. Esterhuizen, Anthony T. Iannacchione
The roof rock in underground limestone mines in Northern Appalachia can be subject to high horizontal stresses in spite of the shallow depth of the workings. The high stresses can cause roof stabilit
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RI 3473 Annual Report Of The Nonmetals Division - Fiscal Year 1939By Oliver C. Ralston, and others
"INTRODUCTION Investigations of the Nonmetals Division are now conducted at College Park, Md.; Tuscaloosa. Ala.; Seattle, Wash.; and. Norris, Tenn. The last of these was acquired, this year by arrange
Oct 1, 1939
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OFR-39(1)-81 Environmental Factors Affecting Surface Mining Of Steeply Pitching Coal Seams - Volume I - OverviewBy Grant R. Brown
The report provides guidance for determining those environmental impacts associated with the surface mining of steeply pitching coal seams. In addition to the environmental impacts, four additional is
Jan 1, 1980
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RI 5266 Estimate Of Known Recoverable Reserves And The Preparation Characteristics Of Coking Coal In Morgan County, Tenn. ? Conclusions ? ReservesBy Lloyd Williams
1. The investigation shows that the Poplar Creek and Big Mary beds contain the largest known recoverable reserves of coal in Morgan County, Tenn. The Poplar Creek bed has been the most productive.
Jan 1, 1956
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OFR-32-79 Radiation Dosimetry In Uranium Mines - Part I - Radon Dosimetry Using Plastic Nuclear Track Detectors - Part II - Measurements Of Gamma-Ray ExposuresBy Allen L. Frank
The uranium mine environment is characterized by airborne radon-222 and its daughter products to which miners are exposed through breathing and by gamma and X rays from the uranium-235 and uranium 238
Jan 1, 1978
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RI 3299 Anhydrous Sodium Sulphate From Saline Deposits Or Brines By A Four-Stage ProcessBy J. E. Conley
Available statistics show that the demands of the American chemical industry for sodium sulphate have been increasing slightly in recent years. The supply from domestic sources, particularly In the fo
Jan 1, 1936
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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
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IC 7430 Low-Temperature Carbonization of Coal in JapanBy William T. Reid
Low-temperature carbonization of coal in Japan served as an important source of liquid fuels during the war. Six plants operating in Japan Proper produced 203,069 KL (53.7 million gallons) of liquid f
Feb 1, 1948
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OFR-29(2)-83 High Angle Conveyor Study - Volume IIBy E. A. Mevissen
With the ever increasing consumption of mineral commodities, the vital question is not whether sufficient mineral quantities will be available, but rather can the known existing low grade resources be
Jan 1, 1981
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IC 7395 Low-Tempertature Coke by the Krupp-Lurgi ProcessBy L. D. Schmidt
Now that the war is over, there is a great revival in popular demand to decrease pollution of the atmosphere in our cities. Great cities, such as Pittsburgh, are starting to enforce laws against viola
Feb 1, 1947
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OFR-112-77 Exploratory Studies Of Flame And Explosion Quenching ? I. Executive Summary ? A. Goal Of The ResearchBy Thomas A. Milne
As part of the broad program to improve the safety of underground coal mines, the Pittsburgh Mining and Safety Research Center sponsored several detailed studies on the inhibition of coal dust-air exp
Jan 1, 1976
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OFR-123(2)-78 Advancement Of Mine Ventilation Network Analysis From Art To Science - Volume II Mine Ventilation Network Theory - I. IntroductionBy M. Didyk
The final objective of a mine ventilation project is to find a way of supplying the working faces with the necessary quantity of air to dilute all the possible air contaminants to safe limits and to m
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 9523 - Surface Mine Blasting Near Pressurized Transmission PipelinesBy David E. Siskind
The U.S. Bureau of Mines and the State of Indiana cooperated with AMAX Coal Co. and its consultants to determine the effects of coal mine overburden blasting on nearby pipelines. Five pressurized 76-m
Jan 1, 2010
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OFR-22-78 Evaluation Of Alternatives For The Kelly Bar Method Of Loading ExplosivesBy Donelson A. Robertson
Includes a review of the state-of-the-art of explosives loading in the crushed stone and cement industries of South Florida and the development of a field test program for alternatives. Emphasis is on
Jan 1, 1978
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IC 9221 Safety Evaluations Of Longwall Roof SupportsBy Thomas M. Barczak
State-of-the-art longwall roof supports provide effective strata control, but failures of these support systems still occur. To identify failure mechanisms and the impact these failures have on the sa
Jan 1, 1989
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RI 9050 - A Method for Locating Abandoned MinesBy R. G. Burdick
The problems presented by old mine workings affect both present day mining and land development. An automated method of locating these old mines from the surface using electrical resistivity technique
Jan 1, 1986
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Introduction - The Mission (c66faee9-c577-4c7d-8a77-1b62b2f800d7)When the Organic Act of 1910 established the Bureau of Mines within the Department of the Interior, the Bureau's programs involved only health and safety research and education, and fuels testing
Jan 1, 1976
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Bulletin 78 Approved Explosion Proof Coal Cutting EquipmentBy L. C. IlsLey, E. J. Gleim
Electrical apparatus because of its flexibility and its adaptability to all classes of service has become essential to the mining industry. Hence the problem of providing electrical equipment that is
Jan 1, 1920
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OFR-83(1)-78 XVI International Conference On Coal Mine Safety Research - I Electrical Apparatus - Study Of Means For Increasing Intensity Of Current That Can Circulate Through An Intrinsically Safe Resistive Circuit - IntroductionBy A. Monomakhoff
If a conductor traversed by an electric current is broken, a conduction forms in the air between the two broken ends of the wire. This conduction manifests itself in an initial phase by an electric sp
Jan 1, 1975