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OFR-62(3)-74 Analysis Of Ore Handling Systems In Underground Metal Mines For Improved Safety And Efficiency - Phase 2. System Improvements And Research RecommendationsThis report covers the results of an industrial engineering study that assessed the safety and efficiency of underground ore handling in U.S. metal mines. Significant conclusions that will be of benef
Jan 1, 1974
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IC 7544 Mines and Mineral Deposits (Except Fuels), Fergus County, MontBy Almon F. Robertson
This report is one of a series based upon investigations made and being made within the Missouri River Basin in Montana by engineers of the Bureau of Mines , Albany Branch , Mining Division . These in
Jan 1, 1950
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OFR-20(1)-76 Applicability Of Available Multiplex Carrier Equipment For Mine Telephone Systems - I. Executive Summary - A. ObjectiveBy Robert L. Lagace
The purpose of the work reported herein was to investigate whether available telephone multiplexing equipment offered a means to rapidly upgrade the traffic-handling capacity of present mine telephone
Jan 1, 1975
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IC 6961 Placer Operations Of Humphreys Gold Corporation, Clear Creek, Colo. ? IntroductionBy E. D. Gardner
Humphreys Gold Corporation of Denver, Colo., was conducting a successful placer operation in 1936 on North Clear Creek about 6 miles below Blackhawk in Gilpin County, Colo. About 3,000 cubic yards of
Jan 1, 1937
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IC 6746 A Review Of Coal-Mine Fatalities In Indiana During The Fiscal Year, October 1, 1931, To September 30, 1932By C. A. Herbert
During the fiscal year ended September 30, 1932, there were 27 fatalities in the coal mines of Indiana. Four of this number occurred in small mines employing less than 10 men, over which the State Ins
Jan 1, 1933
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RI 8464 Practical Ignition Problems Related to Intrinsic Safety in Mine Equipment - Four Short-Term StudiesBy E. L. Litchfield
Four short-term studies of practical ignition problems were undertaken and completed during the course of the Bureau of Mines project "Development of Specifications for Intrinsically Safe Equipment."
Jan 1, 1980
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MLA 45-83 - Mineral Investigation Of The Hauser Rare II Area (No. 5021), San Diego County, California ? SummaryBy Thomas J. Peters
The U.S. Bureau of Mines and the U.S. Geological Survey are responsible for the evaluation of the mineral resources and potential of further planning areas included in the U.S. Forest Service Roadless
Jan 1, 1983
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OFR-13-82 Engineering Property Changes And Environmental Effects On Coal Mines Wastes Due To SlakingFresh coal refuse was sampled at 21 US mines. Five of the sites were drilled, sampled and tested more extensively. Field tests included Standard Penetration tests, and in-situ density determinations.
Jan 1, 1981
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IC 6613 Factors Governing The Selection Of The Proper Level Interval In Underground Mines ? IntroductionBy William O. Vanderburg
Some mines after passing through the prospecting stage and becoming sizable enterprises still adhere to the development program of the prospect, extending their workings without definite plans. In min
Jan 1, 1932
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Sponge Chromium - 1. IntroductionBy C. G. Maier
Relatively infrequent use by metallurgists of the term "sponge chromium" as contrasted to more than occasional reference to "sponge iron" may be ascribed to the fact that the former material is not a
Jan 1, 1942
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OFR-106-79 Quick-Fix Blowout Stopping Field EvaluationBy Mackenzie Burnett
Quick-Fix Blowout Stoppings were evaluated in several underground mines as an alternative to conventional ventilation control bulkheads. Blowout stoppings offer considerable savings in bulkhead constr
Jan 1, 1978
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OFR-73-76 Design, Development, Fabrication And Testing Of A Portable Self-Contained Respirable Dust Recording Mass MonitorBy Pedro Lilienfeld
This Final Report describes a program whose objective was to design, develop, fabricate, and test an airborne mass monitor for unattended and recording measurements of the concentration of dust in min
Jan 1, 1974
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RI 5223 Potential Ignition Hazards Associated With Compressed-Air Blasting Using A Compressor Underground ? IntroductionBy N. E. Hanna
Originally developed for use in coal mines where on-shift blasting with explosives was prohibited, compressed-air blasting has been used for the past 15 years as a substitute for fixed explosives. Wit
Jan 1, 1956
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IC 6651 Abstracts Of Recent Articles On Mine Support ? Recent Practice In Support In MinesBy W. R. Crane
Recent papers on support of roof and top rock in mines representing present practice in so far as it hits been described by engineers in all of the principal mining countries, cover a relatively aide
Jan 1, 1932
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IC 7121 Minerals Used In Welding ? Purpose Of This ReportBy Oliver C. Ralston
The minerals that enter welding-rod coatings and fluxes are the main subject of this report. Few mineral producers know just what minerals and what grades and quantities of minerals are required by th
Jan 1, 1940
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RI 3839 Mining and Concentration of Missouri Valley Manganese at Chamberlain, South DakotaBy Dupuy. Leon W., R. T. C. Rasmussen, W. A. Calhoun
"INTRODUCTION For many years it has been known that low-grade manganese deposits occur in the bluffs along the Missouri River Valley. Frequent attempts have been made to develop the ore and to produce
Feb 1, 1946
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RI 3379 Burning Of Various Coals Continuously And Intermittently On A Domestic Overfeed Stoker ? IntroductionBy H. F. Yancey
The development, manufacture, and sale of small coal stokers suitable for domestic use has provided a new industry in the United States at a time when badly needed. Sales of domestic stokers have doub
Jan 1, 1938
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OFR-54(2)-83 A Study Of The Orthotropy Of Coal And Other Rock Materials - Volume 2By D. J. Hawk
The mechanical properties of coal are often represented by the orthotropicmaterial model, which consists of nine elastic constants. The material symmetries involved are found in coal primarily because
Jan 1, 1980
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IC 6499 Boron And Its Compounds ? IntroductionBy R. M. Santmyers
The chief compounds of boron are borax and boric acid, both of which have important applications in industry. At present the United States furnishes more than half of the world's requirements
Jan 1, 1931
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IC 8949 New Techniques For Reducing Stopping LeakageBy Robert J. Timko
Because of leakage through and around permanent stoppings in underground mines, more air must be forced into a mine than would otherwise be required for ventilation. As power costs increase, costs res
Jan 1, 1983