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Hearing Loss Prevention - Investigation Of Technology For Hearing Loss Prevention (f48a2330-b3f2-41e5-93df-38851e3d20e2)PURPOSE: Evaluate practical technological advances in level-dependent hearing protectors and inexpensive personal acoustic monitors. RESEARCH SUMMARY: The results of previous NIOSH research show
Jan 1, 2000
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RI 8487 Effects of Additives on Methanation Activity of Raney Nickel CatalystsBy James H. Russell
The Bureau of Mines, U.S. Department of the Interior, in cooperation with the Department of Energy, has attempted to increase the activity of nickel catalysts for converting synthesis gas, derived fro
Jan 1, 1980
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RI 5894 Chloridizing The Sulfides Of Lead, Zinc, And Copper ? SummaryBy K. K. Kershner
This report describes an investigation by the Bureau of Mines designed to provide background data for extending and improving the applications of chlorine metallurgy in extracting metals from ores. Op
Jan 1, 1961
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MLA 25-87 - Mineral Resources Of The Pyramid Peak Planning Area, Riverside County, California ? SummaryBy Michael S. Miller
In 1985 and 1986, at the request of the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Bureau of Mines studied the 17,000-acre Pyramid Peak planning area in order to evaluate its identified mineral resources. The plan
Jan 1, 1987
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RI 3676 Exploration for War Minerals (Through Fiscal year 1942By A. C. Johnson, McHenry Mosier
The Bureau of Mines has adapted its activities to needs of national defense and to conditions brought about by the war program . Its work is now oriented solely to war problems . After studying about
Jan 1, 1943
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RI 6513 Thermodynamic Properties of Cuprous and Cupric FerritesBy L. B. Pankratz, R. Barany, W. W. Weller
Experimental determinations were made of the heats of formation at 298.15 ° K of cuprous ferrite and cupric ferrite ; the heat capacity of cuprous ferrite was measured over the temperature range from
Jan 1, 1964
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RI 6595 Field Testing Of The Explosive-Anchored RockboltBy Edward W. Parsons
The explosive-anchored rockbolt was field tested in six mines where rock conditions varied from incompetent shale or mudstone through fairly soft sand-stone to firm sandy shales. The purpose of the te
Jan 1, 1965
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Clean Automotive Fuel - Engine Emissions Using Natural Gas, Hydrogen-Enriched Natural Gas, And Gas Manufactured From Coal (Synthane)By D. B. Eccleston
Natural gas and mixtures of natural gas and hydrogen were used as fuels in a laboratory engine to determine the relationship of emissions to air-fuel ratio and to establish practical lean limits for a
Jan 1, 1972
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Appendix A. - MFIRE Source CodeBy Rudolf E. Greuer, Linneas W. Laage, Xinton Chang
UNIT OF MEASURE ABBREVIATIONS USED IN MFIRE FT foot FT3/MIN cubic foot per minute LBM•MIN2/FT4 pound mass times minutes squared over feet to the fourth FT2/HR square feet per hour BTU/HR*FT*F B
Jan 1, 1990
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RI 8705 Calcination of Aluminum Nitrate Nonahydrate in a Fluidized BedBy Jack C. White
As part of an investigation of the production of alumina by the nitric acid leaching of kaolinitic clay, the Bureau of Mines designed, built, and tested a fluidized-bed system for the calcination of a
Jan 1, 1982
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RI 9234 - Capillary Wetting Response of Coal After Exposure to Ambient Air AtmosphereBy H. W. Kilau
The U.S. Bureau of Mines examined the wettability of bituminous and subbituminous coals before and after exposure to ambient air atmosphere, as part of an ongoing project investigating the coal-wettin
Jan 1, 1989
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RI 5919 Calcium Fluoride Additions To Chlorination Reactions ? SummaryBy A. W. Henderson
The growing importance of halide metallurgy for preparing high-purity metals has stimulated research to extend halogenation reactions to the direct extraction of metals from low-grade sources. This Bu
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 4990 A Colorimetric Method For Determining Pine Oil In Water ? SummaryBy J. A. Sutton
In connection with, a stream-pollution-research project, a colorimetric method was developed for concentrations of 1 to 30 p.p.m, of pine oil in water. The method depends on the stable bluish-green co
Jan 1, 1953
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IC 7706 Chrysotile-Abestos Deposits of ArizonaBy L. A. Stewart
"SUMMARYThis paper describes most of the chrysotile-asbestos deposits of Arizona. Mining methods are discussed briefly and asbestos-mill flowsheets are incorporated. Arizona asbestos mines are the onl
Jan 1, 1955
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IC 7269 Marketing Magnesite And Allied Products ? IntroductionBy Charles L. Harness
Magnesia (MgO) has a variety of uses, and it has become increasingly important as a war material because of the imperative demand for refractories to line metallurgical furnaces, and because magnesia
Jan 1, 1943
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RI 7312 Thermodynamic Properties Of A Redlich-Kwong Fluid In The Two-Phase RegionBy B. J. Dalton
The Bureau of Mines Helium Research Center has as a long-range objective the development of an equation of state for helium that will allow all of the thermodynamic properties to be calculated within
Jan 1, 1969
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RI 5909 Preparation Characteristics Of Coal From Boone County, W. Va. ? SummaryBy T. E. Gray
This report describes the preparation characteristics of the significant coalbeds in Boone County, W. Va., as determined by the Bureau of Mines. It is one of a series describing the coals suitable for
Jan 1, 1961
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RI 8093 - Selected Geologic Factors Affecting Mining Of The Pittsburgh CoalbedBy W. P. Diamond, B. M. Bench, C. M. McCulloch, Maurice Deul
As part of the Bureau of Mines methane control program, the Pittsburgh coalbed was studied in Washington and Green Counties, Pa., and in Marion and Monongalia Counties, W. Va., where this coalbed is n
Jan 1, 1975
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RI 4731 Investigation Of Daggett Chief Manganese Deposit, Manila, Daggett County, UtahBy George W. Heim
Before and during World War II, the Bureau of Mines investigated a large number of ore deposits in the United States and Alaska in a search for domestic sources of strategic minerals. Deposits chosen
Jan 1, 1950
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RI 5589 High-Purity Chromium By Electrolysis ? SummaryBy P. C. Good
High-purity chromium was prepared in massive form by the electrolysis of chromium trioxide solution at high temperatures. The metal thus obtained, containing 50 to 150 p.p.m. of oxygen, 20 p.p.m. of n
Jan 1, 1960