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  • NIOSH
    Mine Fire Source Discrimination Using Fire Sensors and Neural Network Analysis

    By J. C. Edwards

    Fire experiments were conducted in the Safety Research Coal Mine (SRCM) at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Pittsburgh Research Laboratory, with coal, diesel-fuel, electrical

    Jan 1, 2000

  • NIOSH
    Mine Fire Source Discrimination Using Fire Sensors and Neural Network Analysis (55f50308-9407-4980-bfb6-201496866bae)

    By J. C. Edwards

    Fire experiments were conducted in the Safety Research Coal Mine (SRCM) at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Pittsburgh Research Laboratory, with coal, diesel-fuel, electrical

    Jan 1, 2000

  • SME
    Mine Fire Training

    By William Moser, B. P. Shagula

    INTRODUCTION Every day mine management and mining personnel face the threat of a possible mine disaster or fire. Their ability to deal with such a situation safely and effectively depends on the l

    Jan 1, 1992

  • RMCMI
    Mine Fires

    By Thomas Foster

    One of the most dreaded things which mining men sometimes have to contend with is underground mine fires, which are both dangerous and expensive. In the Reliance mines we have had considerable troubl

    Jan 1, 1924

  • AIME
    Mine Fires and Hydraulic Filling

    By H. J. Rahilly

    MINE FIRES, in the Butte District, have been a source of trouble and expense for the past thirty years, for while the actual fire area in most of the mines has been comparatively small, the handling o

    Jan 2, 1922

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Fires and Ventilation

    By Upfold RW, Velzeboer MD

    An underground mine fire will influence the ventilation equilibrium in several ways which results in a redistribution of the ventilating quantities and pressures throughout the whole mine. The vent

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    Mine Fires Extinguished By Sealing

    By Douglas Bunting

    IN THE anthracite fields of Pennsylvania, mine fires occur with more or less regularity and their existence is an ever-present hazard in coal mining. In all probability 90 per cent. of the mine fires

    Jan 9, 1921

  • NIOSH
    Mine Fires – Measuring The Efficacy Of Gas-Enhanced Foam

    By Alex C. Smith, Thomas P. Mucho, John B. Walsh, Alden Ozment, Michael R. Thibou, Michael A. Trevits

    The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), with US Foam Technologies, Inc. and On Site Gas Systems, Inc., conducted research on the remote application of extinguishing agents w

  • CIM
    Mine Gallen, Noranda, Quebec: Geology of an Archean Massive Sulphide Mound

    By John McEwen, Ian R. Jonasson, David H. Watkinson

    "Mine Gallen is a zinc-rich pyritic volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit that occurs in a fault-bounded block of intermediate volcanic rocks. The block is completely surrounded at the present erosion

    Jan 1, 1990

  • CIM
    Mine Games and issue-based education exhibits

    By Gordon Thompson

    "Development of the unique Mine Games exhibition at Science World British Columbia is the largest ever collaboration of many interests to present the story of mining and the issues of mineral developm

    Jan 1, 1995

  • IOM3
    Mine gas exploitation at Appin and Tower Collieries, New South Wales, Australia

    By K. C. Garner

    The visit reported was made with support from the 1997 J.C. Boyle travelling scholarship. The management and control of hazardous gases released into the underground environment are an integral part o

    Jun 21, 1905

  • AIME
    Mine Gases

    By Jed H. Mosgrave

    One of the most interesting of all the subjects required of persons studying the different facets of coal mining is coal mine gases. Some mine gases have been a real problem since the very beginning o

    Jan 1, 1973

  • AIME
    Mine Gases (961564e2-3e94-4c7d-8aa0-efae738fce0e)

    By Jed H. Mosgrove

    One of the most interesting of all the subjects required of persons studying the different facets of coal mining is coal mine gases. Some mine gases have been a real problem since the very beginning o

    Jan 1, 1981

  • AIME
    Mine Gases (97a177ca-7c36-4a13-bdad-72e2306820a1)

    By Jed H. Mosgrove

    One of the most interesting of all the subjects required of persons studying the different facets of coal mining is coal mine gases. Some mine gases have been a real problem since the very beginning o

    Jan 1, 1981

  • SME
    Mine Gases (f0d297b4-53b4-4978-8932-561ecfece80c)

    By Jed H. Mosgrove

    One of the most interesting of all the subjects required of persons studying the different facets of coal mining is coal mine gases. Some mine gases have been a real problem since the very beginning o

    Jan 1, 1981

  • NIOSH
    Mine Gases And Methods For Detecting Them - Introduction

    By J. J. Forbes

    This publication is a revision of the first of a series of four Miners' Circulars originally prepared and issued in 19'29 for use in a course of training designed to prepare mine officials t

    Jan 1, 1954

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Geology from a Geotechnical Perspective

    This paper addresses the role of mine geology in mining geotechnics. The role is assessed and discussed in terms of five main elements; geotechnical complexity, geological complexity, mine scale, perc

    Jan 1, 1993

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Geology of the MacPhersons Reward Gold Mine, Coolgardie, Western Australia

    By M D. Goodz

    MacPhersons Reward gold deposit is in a post-kinematic tonalite intrusion which is a setting different from many other deposits of the Coolgardie goldfield that are hosted in early Archaean tholeiitic

    Aug 22, 2011

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Geology Practices at the Sunrise Open Pit

    By P Williams

    The Sunrise deposit is one of AustraliaÆs largest and most profitable gold deposits. It has consistently and spectacularly outperformed every resource model created. Currently over the life of the Sun

    Jan 1, 2000

  • AUSIMM
    Mine Geology Skill Shortages, Churn and Mentoring - Ways to Improve Individual and Team Performance

    By J Bryant

    In recent years the mining industry has suffered from skill shortages in a range of disciplines including mine geology. As a consequence, many businesses operate with incompletely filled organisation

    Jan 1, 2009