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OFR-8-75 One-Hour Self-Rescue Breathing Apparatus - SummaryBy Yi-Shen Li
This report has been prepared by Lockheed Missiles & Space Company, Inc. (LMSC), under United States Bureau of Mines Contract No. H0220040 dated 21 June 1972 for the design, development, fabrication,
Jan 1, 1974
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RI 3840 Washability Characteristics and Washing of Coals from the Matanuska Field of AlaskaBy M. R. Geer, H. F. Yancey
"INTRODUCTION With the advent of war in 1941, military operations in Alaska were enlarged on such a scale that the demand for coal in the Territory more than doubled. Coal was needed urgently for heat
Jan 1, 1946
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Modelling And Data Analysis Of 50 To 5000 KHz Radio Wave Propagation In Coal Mines - PrefaceBy Robert L. Lagace, Michael A. Grossman, Alfred G. Emslie
This supplement to the final report is a collection of interim and monthly reports and working memoranda prepared during the course of this program to document the progress, methods and results of the
Jan 2, 1980
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PersonnelThe faculty, graduate students, and post-doctoral researchers are an integral part of the Generic Mineral Technology Center for Respirable Dust. More than fifty (50) scientists, engineers, and medical
Aug 31, 1989
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IC 7440 Sponge Iron in JapanBy THEO L. JOHNSTON
In preparing for war , Japan built an iron and steel industry that ranked high with other industrial nations . Deficient in raw materials for making iron and steel , it had to acquire the bulk of its
Mar 1, 1948
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RI 8192 Locating Miners in Smoke-Filled Mine Openings With Infrared ImagersBy Raymond M. Stateham
Calculations based on data obtained from measurements of smoke from coal-fired powerplants predict that infrared imagers will be useful tools for smoke vision. Infrared imagers operating in the 3-to 5
Jan 1, 1976
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Technology News - No. 538 - Acoustic Enclosure to Reduce Noise From Vibrating Screen Mechanism HousingsTo reduce operator exposure to noise from vibrating screens at coal preparation plants. Background Hearing loss is one of the most common occupational illnesses in the United States. In the U.
Nov 1, 2009
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RI 2095 Decreases in Coal-Mine AccidentsBy W. W. Adams
"A gratifying decrease is noticeable in the number of men killed in the coal minas of the United States during the past six months as compared to the quantity of coal produced.During July last year, w
Mar 1, 1920
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Some Observations on Particulates Collected in Underground Coal Mines using Diesel and Non-Diesel EquipmentBy Lijun Xu, Jan M. Mutmansky
"Mutmansky, J.M. and· Lijun Xu, 1989. Some observations on particulates collected in underground coal mines using diesel and non-diesel equipment. Min. Sci. Technol., 9: 207-218.The results obtained w
Jan 1, 1990
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IC 6672 Ten years of fatal accidents and two years of accident costs in Indiana coal miningBy C. A. Herbert
"The Workman's Compensation Law of Indiana, enacted in 1915, amended in 1917, 1919, 1923, and 1927, and in 1929 named the Indiana Workmen's Compensation Act of 1929, provides for a weekly compensation
Dec 1, 1932
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RI 2964 Survey Of Fuel Consumption At Refineries In 1928By C. R. Hopkins
"The petroleum refiners of the United States made rapid strides in fuel economy in 1928, when the calculated number of B. t. u. required to refine a barrel of crude petroleum was 637,000 as compared w
Nov 1, 1929
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IC 7376 Interrogation of Dr. Pier and StaffBy W. F. Faragher, W. A. HORNE
Previous interrogation of German scientific personnel by numerous in- vestigators and the examination of evacuated documents indicated that fur- ther information was desirable on a miscellany of produ
Aug 1, 1943
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IC 7383 Summarized Statistics of Production of Lead and Zinc in the'Tri-State (Missouri-Kansas-Oklahoma) Mining DistrictBy A. J. Martin
The Tri-State, or Joplin, zinc and lead mining district in south- western Missouri and adjoining, parts of Kansas and Oklahoma is one of the great mining districts of the world. It is in flat-lying or
Nov 1, 1946
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RI 4401 Production Of Lightweight Concrete Aggregates From Clays, Shales, Slates, And Other MaterialsBy John E. Conley
The need for lightweight aggregate for use in concrete products ,and structures has caused the Bureau of Mines to undertake an investigation to determine the availability of suitable raw materials and
Jan 1, 1949
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RI 5423 Chemical And Galvanic Corrosion Properties Of Titanium Alloys ? SummaryBy Charles B. Kenahan
The chemical and galvanic corrosion properties of commercially pure titanium, a titanium-manganese alloy, a titanium-aluminum-tin alloy, 2 titanium-copper alloys, and 2 titanium-aluminum alloys were s
Jan 1, 1958
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IC 7668 Vermiculite ? IntroductionBy O. S. North
As recently as the late 1920's there Were few indications that a 15-million-dollar-a-year industry would ever grow out of the mineralogic curiosity vermiculite. Today, it is an important industri
Jan 1, 1953
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RI 4841 Beneficiation Of High Iron Arkansas Bauxite OreBy W. A. Calhoun
A method for treating high-iron Arkansas bauxites for recovering both abrasive and metal-grade bauxite has been developed by the Bureau of Mines. Present practice usually produces a reject containing
Jan 1, 1952
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IC 6658 Milling Methods And Costs At A Flat River, (Mo.) Mill ? IntroductionBy Will H. Coghill
This paper on milling methods and costs at a flat river (Mo.), mill is one of a series of information circulars on milling methods and costs which is being prepared by the United States Bureau of Mine
Jan 1, 1932
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Bulletin 233 Protection of Oil and Gas Field Equipment Against CorrosionBy R. Van A. Mills
Rapid deterioration and destruction of metal equipment in oil and gas fields cause waste of resources and financial losses that must be lessened or eliminated if operations in many important fields ar
Jan 1, 1925
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IC 7920 An Indirect-Cycle Nuclear-Reactor System To Furnish Process Heat -- Engineering And Design Concepts ? SummaryBy R. Carson Dalzell
The use of nuclear fission for chemical process heat offers the special advantage of high temperature, limited only by materials of construction. The process heat may be supplied economically at eleva
Jan 1, 1959