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IC 7181 Status Of Safety In Mining ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
The mining industry of the United States has-long been severely criticized because of its high rate of accident occurrence, net only as compared with other major industries-in the United States but al
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7182 Review Of Literature On Conditioning Air For Advancement Of Health And Safety In Mines - Part II. Need For Air Conditioning Indicated By Physical Quality Of Underground Air ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
This circular is part II of a series of papers reviewing the literature on air conditioning in mines with particular reference to the health, safety, and efficiency of employees. It deals with the phy
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7185 Inspection And Testing Of Mine-Type Electrical Equipment For Permissibility ? IntroductionBy L. C. IlsLey
The theory and practice followed by the Bureau of ones in the investigation of electrical equipment4/ made for service in massy mines are of particular interest not only to manufacturers but also to t
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7186 Accident Experience At Pebble-Phosphate Operations In Florida 1930-40 ? IntroductionBy Frank E. Cash
Data on the accident experience of the pebble-phosphate industry in Florida for 1930 and 1940 are combined in this report with statistics for the 9-year period 1930-38, inclusive, which were published
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7189 Coal, Petroleum, Natural Gas, And Electricity In The United States, 1929-40 ? Introduction And Purpose Of StudyBy John R. Bradley
The available supply of fuel and power is a subject of importance at all times and particularly at this time. The following brief survey of fuel and power in the United States appraises the extent of
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7190 Annual Report Of Research And Technologic Work On Coal, Fiscal Year 1941 ? ForewordBy A. C. Fieldner
Much activity is called for in the present period of hightened national effort, and wise direction of such a program must always be conditioned by positive knowledge gained in years of slow and painst
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7191 Prevention Of Premature Shots During Springing Of Deep Drill Holes In Quarries And Open-Pit Workings - IntroductionBy D. Harrington
Springing or chambering of deep drill holes is common practice in some quarries. It involves definite hazards from premature explosion during placing of the springing charges or the final charge due c
Jan 1, 1941
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IC 7197 Chalk And Whiting ? Introduction And AcknowledgmentsBy Oliver Bowles
Whiting or Paris white is a fine-grained preparation of calcium carbonate having a wide variety of uses. Until recent years it was prepared almost exclusively from certain north European chalks. With
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7198 Marketing Natural Minerals Pigments ? General Definition And UsesBy Charles L. Harnes
A mineral pigment is a colored substance dug from the ground, which after treatment can be mixed with a drying oil to form a paint. Not all colored earths, however, can be made into satisfactory pigme
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7208 Coal-Mine Explosions And Coal- And Metal-Mine Fires In The United States During The Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1941 ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
The record of fatalities from mine explosions during the past 2 fiscal years has been anything but encouraging; more men were killed by explosions (379) than were killed from the ante cause during to
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7209 Findings from Major Studies of FatigueBy R. R. Sayers
Under compuision of the present urgency to implement the President's promise to make the United States the arsenal for the democracies there is a tendency to demand a relaxation of restrictions on hou
Jun 1, 1942
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IC 7211 Pointers On The Storage Of CoalBy J. F. Barkley
During the present war emergency, under the urge of the Federal Government to store coal, the following; questions are arising n the minds of coal users: (a) Will the coal lose any of its heating v
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7212 Sodium CarbonateBy Charles L. Harness, A. T. Coons
Sodium carbonate, Na2CO3, more commonly known as soda ash, is the most important of the alkalies. Sulfuric acid is the only heavy chemical, Soda ash enters the market either as the natural product or
Jun 1, 1942
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IC 7213 Dredging Pennsylvania Anthracite ? ForewordBy Joseph A. Corgan
The river- or dredge-coal industry of Pennsylvania is conducted on many of the rivers and creeks that drain the Pennsylvania anthracite fields. Coal thus recovered found its way into the streams as co
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7214 Questions And Answers On Storage Of Coal In The Rocky Mountain Area ? Who Should Store Coal And Why?By V. F. Parry
Under the present emergency every consumer should store as much coal as he can. Although there is no shortage of coal, there is likely to be a shortage of labor to mine excessive quantities in the fal
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7218 Proposed Methods And Estimated Costs Of Mining Oil Shale At Rulison, Colo. ? IntroductionBy E. D. Gardner
Oil shale, a long-considered potential source of motor fuel in the United States, is found over an extensive area in the Green River formation in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming.4/ Oil has been retorte
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7219 Marketing Strategic Mica ? IntroductionBy Lawrence G. Houk
In modern warfare mica is truly indispensable. The coordination of combatant units necessitates maintenance of intricate communications equipment, in the construction of which high-grade sheet mica is
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7222 Use Of Diesel Locomotives In Tunnels ? IntroductionBy S. H. Ash
Probably one of the most significant departures in tunneling practice is the introduction of Diesel locomotives far haulage (Diesel trucks have been used for some time). The fallacy of the belief that
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7224 Directions For Laboratory Mineral Sizing ? IntroductionBy John Dasher
The impetus given to mineral dressing arid chemical engineering by the war has placed many persons without previous experience in positions where they are concerned with the size of solid materials th
Jan 1, 1942
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IC 7225 Marketing Lithium Minerals ? IntroductionBy Lawrence G. Houk
Lithium is the lightest of all metals, but as it deteriorates rapidly in air it has no structural applications. Alloys of lithium that will float upon water can be made with other light metals, but th
Jan 1, 1942