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Independent Contractor Trends In The United States Mining IndustryBy E. A. Barrett, L. L. Rethi, B. Fotta
Employment and accident trends of independent contractors working at coal and noncoal mines in the United States are reported. Data include employee hours and accidents, both fatal and nonfatal, from
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Utilization And Efficiency In Underground Coal Mine Electrical SystemsBy Lloyd A. Morley
To reduce safety and production problems, it is essential that the electrical operating characteristics of coal mining equipment and their electrical subsystems be clearly understood. The Bureau of Mi
Jan 1, 1975
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Bulletin 28 Experimental Work Conducted in the Chemical LabBy N. W. Lord
The experimental work reported upon herein was performed at the laboratory of the United States fuel-testing plant on the grounds of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition at St. Louis, Mo., between Janu-
Jan 1, 1911
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On the Transport of Airborne Dust in Mine AirwaysBy R. V. Ramani, R. Bhaskar
One of the primary means of .control of health hazards from respirable contaminants in mine atmospheres is through design and operation of mines to meet mine health and safety regulations and recommen
Jan 1, 1990
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Methods For Determining Roof Fall Risk In Underground MinesBy T. Bajpayee, L. Prosser, A. Iannacchione, G. Esterhuizen
Reducing the number of roof fall injuries is a goal of the NIOSH mine safety research program. Central to this effort is the development of assessment techniques to help identify the nature of the ris
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Bulletin 68 Electric Switches for Use in Gaseous MinesBy R. W. Crocker, H. H. Clark
The purpose of the investigation discussed in this bulletin, one of a series dealing with the use of electricity in mines, was to study the various means and methods used to confine the flashes that o
Jan 1, 1913
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New Strength Formula For Coal Pillars In South AfricaBy J. Nielen van der Merwe
For the last 3 decades, coal pillars in the Republic of South Africa have been designed using the well-known strength formula of Salamon and Munro that was empirically derived after the Coalbrook disa
Jan 5, 1999
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RI 2226 Dangers In Using Low-Grade Foreign DetonatorsBy Charles E. Munroe
"It has been recently learned that certain foreign manufacturers are offering far importation into this country detonators at greatly reduced prices, some of these detonators being of such low grade (
Mar 1, 1921
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Bulletin 22 Analyses of Coals in the United StatesBy N. W. Lord
This volume contains the descriptions of the samples whose analy- ses are published in the preceding volume, Part I of this bulletin. The descriptions have been compiled from the notebooks of the per-
Jan 1, 1913
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Historical Perspective Of Personal Dust Sampling In Coal MinesBy F. N. Kissell, J. Kohler
Proper measurement of dust particle concentration is a critical step toward the elimination of dust-related occupational disease. This paper examines the development of dust sampling methods in U.S. c
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The State-Of-The-Art In Coal Pillar DesignBy 1980, the U.S. mining community had reached a broad consensus regarding coal pillar design. The pillar load could be estimated from tributary area theory, and the pillar strength from empirical for
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Underhand Cut and Fill Mining as Practiced in Three Deep Hard Rock Mines in the United States (6e8899b4-3bd8-4573-8417-50dde1c7e2d1)By Rad B. Langston, Ted J. Williams, John A. Marjerison, Rimas T. Pakalnis, Tom M. Brady, Doug C. Bayer, Mark J. Bren
Underhand cut and fill mining methods are used at the Lucky Friday, Stillwater, and Galena mines in the western US in an effort to safely mine in difficult ground conditions and as a primary mining me
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The Effects Of Disaster On Workers: A Study Of Burnout In Investigators Of Serious Accidents And Fatalities In The U.S. Mining IndustryBy Kathleen M. Kowalski, Audrey Podlesny
The Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) was administered and scored for 154 Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), U.S. Department of Labor, employees who serve as accident investigators for seriou
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RI 3213 Investigations during 1932 of Combustibles in Manholes, Boston, MassBy F. M. Goodwin, John Campbell, G. W. Jones
"INTRODUCTION In previous reports 5 results were given of a manhole investigation carried out over a period from June 1929 to July 193C in cooperation with the Edison Electric Illuminating Co. of Bost
Jun 1, 1933
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Current State Of Insert-Type Hearing Protector Fit-Testing: Follow-On Measurements In The Steel Industry And Fit-Testing In A Mobile EnvironmentBy Kevin Michael, David C. Byrne
In previous issue of Spectrum (October 1999, 16/4), a system of measuring the attenuation provided by insert-type hearing protectors was described, That report described experiences using the FitCheck
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IC 6712 Portable electric lamps for animal haulage in AlabamaBy C. E. Saxon, F. E. Cash
"Adequate lighting for all mining operations would unquestionably tend to promote both safety and efficiency; this would be true not only for men but also for the animals that man impresses into servi
May 1, 1933
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RI 8029 Chemical Flame Inhibition Using Molecular Beam Mass Spectrometry - Reaction Rates and Mechanisms in a 0.3 Percent CF3Br Inhibited Methane FlameBy Joan C. Biordi
[Composition profiles for atomic, radical, and stable species, as well as temperature and area expansion ratio profiles, have been determined for a nearly stoichiometric CH4-02-Ar flame and one to whi
Jan 1, 1975
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Minerals In The World Economy (7008a731-921b-4f97-80d9-29d1bdfa317d)By Stephen C. Brown
The major developments of the world's Mineral economy in 1955 were the continued rise in production and consumption of practically all major minerals. the sharp increase in output of the fertiliz
Jan 1, 1967
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Mining And Quarrying Trends In The Metal And Nonmetal IndustriesBy T. A. Johnson
Recovering from low demand in 1975, raw mineral production in the United States maintained a steady climb in value and quantity throughout 1976, keeping pace with the gross national product (GNP), whi
Jan 1, 1978
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RI 3332 Survey of Fuel Consumption at Refineries in 1935By G. R. Hopkins
"A new record in fuel efficiency at petroleum refineries was achieved in 1935, when an average of only 615,000 B. t. u. was needed to refine a barrel of crude oil, compared with an average of 638,000
Jan 1, 1937