RI 3543 Use Of Rock Dust In Bituminous-Coal Mines, 1930-38 (A Statistical Survey)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 4791 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1940
Abstract
Rock dust, as a preventive or limiting factor in explosions of gas and coal dust in bituminous-coal mines, was used in larger quantities in 1939 than in any other year except 1937 since annual figures first became available in 1930, Reports from mining companies to the Bureau of Mines revealed that 144,430,000 pounds of rock dust was applied to underground nine workings in mines that produced 126,635,677 short tons of coal during the year. This quantity of rock dust applied averaged 1.14 pounds for each ton of coal produced. Rock dusted mines were the source of 39.7 percent of the total production of bituminous coal from underground mines; 33.2 percent of the total number of underground workers were employed at rock-dusted mines, and 35.8 percent of the total number of man-hours worked underground at all bituminous-coal mines in the United States during 19719 can be accredited to mines so treated. Rock dust was employed chiefly in the larger mines, which numbered only 431 out of 6,016 underground mines in operation in 1935, according to reports from mining companies. The mines in which rock dust was used had an average of 288 underground employees per mine, whereas mines in which rock dust was not used averaged only 62 underground employees per mine.
Citation
APA:
(1940) RI 3543 Use Of Rock Dust In Bituminous-Coal Mines, 1930-38 (A Statistical Survey)MLA: RI 3543 Use Of Rock Dust In Bituminous-Coal Mines, 1930-38 (A Statistical Survey). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1940.