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RI 3106 Leaching Oxidized Copper Ores: Effect Of Strength Of Acid In Leaching Solvent ? IntroductionBy John D. Sullivan
In leaching copper ores knowledge of the rate of dissolution of the copper minerals and of the impurities is desirable. With knowledge of these two factors and data as to what minerals are present in
Jan 1, 1931
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RI 3106 Leaching Oxidized Copper Ores: Effect Of Strength Of Acid In Leaching SolventBy John D. Sullivan
In leaching copper ores knowledge of the rate of dissolution of the copper minerals and of the impurities is desirable. With knowledge of these two factors and data as to what minerals are present in
Jan 1, 1931
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IC 8474 Calculation Procedure For Heat Transfer To A Gas-Solid Suspension From An Externally Heated TubeBy M. B. Bransford
A calculation procedure was evolved by the Bureau of Mines for determining the heat-transfer characteristics of dilute gas-solid mixtures in an externally heated tube. The procedure accounts for diffe
Jan 1, 1970
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RI 8247 Geology and Gas Content of Coalbeds in Vicinity of Bureau of Mines, Bruceton, Pa. (e39ac9bb-bfb7-4880-b40c-a1cecfdc121a)By C. H. Elder
Two degasification test boreholes were drilled to depths of 1,238 and 1,212 feet on Bureau of Mines property at Bruceton, Pa., as part of the Bureau's long-range coal degasification program. The
Jan 1, 1977
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RI 4780 Concentration Of Oxide Manganese Ores From Lander County, Nev.By T. F. Mitchell
As a part of the program of investigation of domestic sources of manganese ore, mining engineers of the Bureau of Mines examined and obtained samples of ore from two properties in the vicinity of Bett
Jan 1, 1951
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IC 7099 Accident Experience Of Four Louisiana Petroleum Refineries, 1929-38 ? IntroductionBy Frank E. Cash
Accident prevention is an integral part of the operating procedure of the petroleum industry, and refinery officials and employees throughout the United States are exerting concerted effort to reduce
Jan 1, 1940
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IC 7447 - Protection Against Lightning At Surface And Underground Mining PlantsBy D. J. Parker, D. Harrington, L. H. Harrison
The necessity for protection against the hazards of lightning manifests itself from time to time in the mining industry by reason of loss of life, damage to electrical equipment, fires in surface stru
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RI 5679 Cebolla Creek Titaniferous Iron Deposits, Gunnison County, Colo. ? Introduction And SummaryBy Charles K. Rose
The Cebolla Creek titaniferous iron deposits near Powderhorn in southern Gunnison County, Colo., were examined by the Federal Bureau of Mines as part of an overall program to investigate the Nation&ap
Jan 1, 1960
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RI 6236 Sulfuric Acid From Sulfur Dioxide By Autoxidation In Mechanical CellsBy Carl Rampacek
The conversion of dilute sulfur dioxide gas into sulfuric acid by autoxidation in mechanical cells of the flotation or gas absorber types was investigated. Bench-scale tests were made with sulfur diox
Jan 1, 1963
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RI 5855 Low -Temperature Heat Capacities And Entropies At 298.15° K. Of Some Sodium-And Calcium-Aluminum Silicates ? Introduction And SummaryBy E. G. King
Sodium-aluminum and calcium-aluminum silicates are important rock-forming minerals. While many of them are of only theoretical interest, several are of practical importance--as ceramic raw materials a
Jan 1, 1961
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RI 4395 Investigation Of Ely Mine Copper Deposit Orange County, Vt.By H. P. Hermance
The Ely mine, which at one time was the largest producer of copper in the United States, has been idle for the past 30 years. A remarkably continuous ore shoot probably averaging 100 feet wide and 19
Jan 1, 1949
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IC 7693 Petroleum Refineries, Including Cracking Plants In The United States, January 1, 1954 ? Summary ? Crude-Oil CapacityBy J. G. Kirby
According to the Bureau of Mines annual survey, as of January 1, 1954 there were 337 refineries with a total daily crude-oil throughput capacity of 8,006,897 barrels. The total daily capacity increase
Jan 1, 1954
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RI 6749 Effects Of Certain Mineralogical Features On Phosphate RecoveryBy J. W. Town
The Bureau of Mines conducted phosphate beneficiation studies to determine the influence of mineralogical and textural features on the recovery of phosphate from select bed and composite samples repre
Jan 1, 1966
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RI 7714 Analysis Of Trace Elements In Coal By Spark-Source Mass SpectrometryBy T. Kessler
As part of a respirable mine-dust research program at the U.S. Bureau of Mines, spark-source mass spectrometry has been used for the semiquantitative determination of trace elements (200 ppm weight or
Jan 1, 1973
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Data CollectionBy Thomas V. Falkie, R. Venkataramani
The empirical nature of this investigation required measurements of variables under operating conditions in underground coal mines. The variables to be measured were based on the postulated character¬
Jan 1, 1972
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International StandardsBy Lloyd A. Morley, Robert Stefanko
A major difficulty encountered during the research was that nation¬al countries (almost world-wide) are in the process of revising their electrical hazard reduction standards. Their principal goal is
Jan 1, 1974
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Ergonomics: Beyond ComplianceBy D. Caruso
The health and financial costs of cumulative injuries are plaguing the mining industry. Industry leaders are concentrating on reducing the risk of injury to their workers through design and redesign o
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RI 6782 Low-Temperature Heat Capacities And Entropies At 298.15°K Of Ferrous Molybdate And Ferrous TungstateBy W. W. Weller
Heat capacities of ferrous molybdate (FeMoO4) and ferrous tungstate (FeWO4) were measured over the temperature range 51° to 298.15° K. Ferrous tungstate has a lambda type heat capacity anomaly at 74°
Jan 1, 1966
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IC 8659 Methane Emission From U.S. Coal Mines In 1973, A Survey - A Supplement To IC 8558 (cf3baefd-ee84-4969-9593-28ca80239518)By M. C. Irani
This Bureau of Mines survey of methane emissions indicates that total daily emissions have declined from 227 MM ft3 in 1971 to 214.7 MM ft3 in 1973. The highest average daily emissions in million cubi
Jan 1, 1974
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Ventilation Simulation Application To An Existing MineBy R. V. Ramani, R. Stefanko, G. W. Luxbacher
A computer model of an existing mine ventilation system can be executed using data developed from ventilation survey results. This model can then be used to analyze and evaluate proposed modifications
Jan 1, 1977