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  • RMCMI
    Proceedings of the Fifty-First Regular Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute Glenwood Springs, Colorado June 26,27,28,29, 1955 - President's Address

    By C. Arthur Carlson

    "It now becomes my privilege and duty to call to order this fifty-first meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute. "I bid you a hearty welcome and I know by your attendance at these meetin

    Jan 1, 1955

  • RMCMI
    Proceedings of the Fiftieth Regular Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute Glenwood Springs, Colorado - Morning Session Monday, June 28, 1954 - President's Address

    By J. R. Kastler

    It becomes my pleasant duty to call the meeting to order. This is our fiftieth regular meeting. And the session we are opening today, I am sure: will be as interesting and informative as those in the

    Jan 1, 1954

  • RMCMI
    Proceedings of the Fifty-Second Regular Meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute Glenwood Springs, Colorado June 17, 18, 19, 20, 1956 - President's Address

    "Guests and Members of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute: "It gives me a great deal of pleasure to call the Fifty-Second regular meeting to order this morning. "I think that you will agree wi

    Jan 1, 1956

  • RMCMI
    Western Coal, Fuel for the '80s and '90s

    By Ted Schwinden

    It's my pleasure to welcome the Rocky Mountain Coal Institute to Montana. Now that you've ended a 74 year history of meeting outside our borders, I hope you'll be back more often. Even

    Jan 1, 1986

  • RMCMI
    The United States Fuel Company's Tipple at The Hiawatha Mine, Hiawatha, Utah

    By John M. Jennings

    The Hiawatha pitmouth is located at the head of the middle fork of Miller creek, at an altitude of approximately 8,100 feet. The coal is lowered to the tipple down a gravity tram two miles long, in 16

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of Mr. Trik's Paper

    PRESIDENT MARKS: This is a matter, I think, in which we are all very much interested, and I know We will have considerable discussion on the subject. MR. GIBSON: Wouldn't it be a fact, Mr. Tric

    Jan 1, 1926

  • RMCMI
    The Use of Permissible Powder in Coal Mining With Special Reference to Cushion Shooting

    By H. Petersen

    If a coal mine producing two hundred thousand (200,000) tons of coal per year could effect a 2 per cent decrease in the percentage of slack there would be an additional 4,000 tons of prepared coal pro

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of Harrington's And Clare?s Papers

    D. HARRINGTON: Owing to lack of funds, the United States Bureau of Mines have made no experiments in the Bruceton mines in the use of mudite. MR. McAULIFFE: I doubt that mudite cam be delivered at f

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Mr. Terzian's Luncheon Address

    MR. McKEEVER: I think we had to start some- where. The proceeds of the beltbuckles and hard hat stickers will certainly be a beginning in a scholarship for some of our young people. And maybe, you kno

    Jan 1, 1982

  • RMCMI
    Harmony and Co-operation

    By H. F. Nash

    Coal is the basic necessity of our present-day civilization, and those engaged in the industry, whether miner, day-man, pit boss, tipple boss, superintendent, salesman or operator, have a direct respo

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Flexoid Tubing and Its Application to Coal Mines As a Means of Temporary Ventilation

    By George A. Brown

    Flexoid tubing for ventilation and some of the reasons for its use in re-opening old workings at the Union Pacific Coal Company's mines at Cumberland, Wyoming. , These mines are located on a bra

    Jan 1, 1921

  • RMCMI
    Have Mining Engineers Accepted All That Developments in Machinery Apply?

    By R. Dawson Hall

    *This paper was not read as it arrived too late. In the beginning of the last century "cottage industry" gave way to the factory system, and at present manufacturing that was once performed in homes

    Jan 1, 1922

  • RMCMI
    Advertisements

    Jan 1, 1966

  • RMCMI
    Industrial Education in New Mexico and Colorado Mines - Denver, Colorado, Thursday, February 24, 1927. 9:50 A. M.

    PRESIDENT MOSES.: The meeting will please come to order. Will you kindly state your names prior to making any statements, in order that we may deep the record straight? The first paper this morning is

    Jan 1, 1927

  • RMCMI
    Discussion Of Mr. Stroup's Paper

    PRESIDENT PRYDE: I think that the overcutting machine undoubtedly presents a great many benefits, especially where the roof is frail. I have found a good substitute for the Arcwall, getting a lighter

    Jan 1, 1924

  • RMCMI
    Advertisers

    The following pages contain valuable information about the products and services offered by our advertisers

    Jan 1, 1982

  • RMCMI
    Morning Session Saturday, June 28, 1941 - Development With and Against the Pitch at the Union Pacific Coal Company's Mines, Reliance and Winton, Wyoming

    By John E. Willson

    Typical of southwestern Wyoming are coal structures that dip from 4 degrees to 17 degrees. Those at the Reliance and Winton mines of the Union Pacific Coal Company average 9 1/2 degrees and 15 degrees

    Jan 1, 1941

  • RMCMI
    Discussion of Mechanical Loading

    Secretary's Apology: Although every effort was made to secure efficient stenographers, the railroad conditions at the time made it impossible to get stenographers from Salt Lake City. Practicall

    Jan 1, 1925

  • RMCMI
    Plots, Plans, and Partnerships: Global Goverance and U.S. Mining

    By Richard L. Lawson

    The coal producers of the Rocky Mountain states have led in one of America's true industry revolutions - the leaps in productivity and competitiveness that deliver coal-fired electric power to th

    Jan 1, 1996

  • RMCMI
    New Steel Tipple Recently Built by Spring Canyon Coal Company, Spring Canyon, Utah

    By G. A. Murphy

    This tipple differs from the ordinary tipple only in that it embodies numerous refinements for grading and otherwise preparing the coal. Coal from the mines is delivered to the tipple over a surface

    Jan 1, 1925