IC 7418 Procedure Used in Fighting and Sealing a Fire in an Ohio Coal Mine and Recovery of the Mine by Air-Locking Methods

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 1298 KB
- Publication Date:
- Oct 1, 1947
Abstract
"INTRODUCTION The work of using a system of air locks in unsealing a mine in Ohio following a fire probably was one of the outstanding jobs of its kind in a medium-thick coal bed.The fire in this mine, thought to have been of electrical origin, was discovered at about 1:30 a.m. on December 11, 1941. Forty-four men were working in the affected section at the time; 5 escaped unassisted, and 37, who had barricaded themselves, were rescued. The bodies of two men, who had succumbed after breathing fumes given off by the fire, were brought part way out of the mine before it became necessary to seal the mine.Direct attempts to extinguish the fire with water were abandoned when hazardous amounts of 'carbon monoxide, methane, and other inflammable gases were detected in return air passing through the main haulageway and escape-way of the mine.The mine was completely sealed on the surface at about 8 p.m. on December 12, 1941, with the two bodies remaining in the mine. Sixteen days after the mine had been sealed, the two bodies were recovered. This was accomplished by air-locking through a partitioned-off stairs compartment of a ventilation shaft. This work was done under adverse barometric and atmospheric conditions.A method for collecting representative air samples from the immediate fire area was used successfully by utilizing a vacuum pump on about 10,000 feet of existing water line that had been broken near the fire area.The immediate fire region was sealed, and confined to a relatively small area; the remainder of the mine was recovered, and operations were resumed February 9, 1942, or 59, days from the time of sealing the mine on the surface. This recovery was made by air-locking the main entries inby from the shaft and No. 2 right-face entries.The distance between air locks averaged about 500 feet, and as each new set of seal stoppings and air locks was completed, the old or outby seals were taken out and the area between was ventilated. In ventilating this area, it was often necessary to use line curtains to direct the air into dead-end places."
Citation
APA:
(1947) IC 7418 Procedure Used in Fighting and Sealing a Fire in an Ohio Coal Mine and Recovery of the Mine by Air-Locking MethodsMLA: IC 7418 Procedure Used in Fighting and Sealing a Fire in an Ohio Coal Mine and Recovery of the Mine by Air-Locking Methods. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1947.