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  • NIOSH
    Employment And Injuries In The Mineral Industries (362d0b8d-bf7f-4583-b8a7-b8bcbce115c3)

    By Forrest T. Moyer

    OVERALL data for 1963 on injury experience and the levels of employment, worktime, and operating activity of the mineral industries are shown in the statistical tables of this chapter. The general gro

    Jan 1, 1964

  • NIOSH
    Physiological Responses And Subjective Discomfort Of Simulated Whole-Body Vibration From A Mobile Underground Mining Machine

    By Sean Gallagher, Thomas G. Bobick, Diane M. Doyle-Coombs, Richard L. Unger

    The U.S. Bureau of Mines has developed an in-house facility to evaluate selected effects of whole-body vibration (WBV) levels experienced by underground mobile equipment operators, Vertical vibration

  • NIOSH
    High-Pressure Nitrogen Alloying Of Steels - Objective

    Improve the strength and other properties of steel alloys. Approach Research by the U.S. Bureau of Mines indicates that steels melted and solidified under high nitrogen pressure acquire yield an

    Jan 1, 1992

  • NIOSH
    In-Mine Treatment Of Acidic Drainage Using Anaerobic Bioreactors - Objective

    To develop an in-mine water treatment system in which bacterial sulfate reduction and limestone dissolution continuously remove metals and acidity from contaminated drainage. Approach A section

    Jan 1, 1994

  • NIOSH
    User-Friendly In Situ Copper Oxide Leach Mining Cost Model - Objective

    Enable prospective in situ leach mine operators to evaluate the economic potential of an ore body by using a user-friendly, computerized in situ copper oxide leach mining cost model. Background

    Jan 1, 1991

  • NIOSH
    Using the Internet to Train Emergency Command Center Personnel

    By Audrey F. Glowacki, August J. Kwitowski, Richard L. Unger, Edward F. Fries

    Well-prepared personnel and an effective emergency response plan are essential components of any emergency command center. Unfortunately, evaluating emergency preparedness is often difficult until a d

  • NIOSH
    Minerals In The World Economy - Introduction (e022e100-ca87-4124-8f4e-ad692b7014b2)

    By Charles L. Kimbell

    This study is intended to serve three roles. First, it is the second annual edition of this study in a separate volume that represents a global overview and summary to supplement and complement the fi

    Jan 1, 1993

  • NIOSH
    Pick-Point Drum Spray System Minimizes Longwall Shearer Operator's Respirable Dust Exposure - Objective

    Reduce longwall shearer operator's dust exposure by selecting the best drum water spray sys-tem for minimizing dust generated durinq cutting. Approach Three of the most commonly-used drum

    Jan 1, 1986

  • NIOSH
    Emergency Rescue Hoists

    By David Hoadley, Kenneth R. Maser, Ashok B. Boghani, James E. Billar, D. Randolph Berry, Mackenzie Burnett, Robert H. Trent

    C. 7 Emergency Rescue Hoists There is a need, especially in mine development areas, for portable, on-call, man-rated equipment capable of lifting men through several hundred feet. Wire rope climb

    Jan 1, 1976

  • NIOSH
    Evaluating Longwall Dust Sources And Controls

    By J. P. Rider

    Health surveillance efforts indicate that the development of lung disease and overexposure to respirable dust in underground coal mires continues to afflict mine worker. Results from the most recent r

  • NIOSH
    Continuous wave laser ignition thresholds of coal dust clouds

    By Jr. Dubaniewicz, Gregory M. Green, Kenneth L. Cashdollar

    Laser-based instruments are used in areas where coal dust ignition presents a safety hazard. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Pittsburgh Research Laboratory ~NIOSH, PRL! is

  • NIOSH
    RI 4152 Andover-Sulphur Hill Iron Mines- Sussex Co., NJ

    By Victor J. Lynch

    The Andover-Sulphur Hill mines are 12 miles northeast of Andover and 5 miles southeast of Newton, in Sussex County, N.J. The property is situated on the Lehigh Valley and Hudson River Railroad and hal

    Dec 1, 1947

  • NIOSH
    State Statistics – Mew Mexico

    Although early Spanish settlers used coal several centuries ago, significant commercial coal mining in New Mexico began in 1861, when the U.S. Army opened a mine to supply Fort Craig. Since then, coal

    Jan 1, 1992

  • NIOSH
    IC 9321 - MUSLIM/NLTheoretical and Practitioners Manual

    By R. Karl Zipf

    MULSIM/NL (multiple seams, nonlinear) is a new U.S. Bureau of Mines boundary-element-method (BEM) program for calculating stresses and displacements (is., convergence) in coal mines or thin, tabular r

    Jan 1, 1992

  • NIOSH
    Assessing Roof Fall Hazards for Underground Stone Mines: A Proposed Methodology

    By L. Prosser, A. Iannacchione, G. Esterhuizen

    The potential for roof falls in underground mines remains a clear and present danger for mine workers. An investigation of ground conditions in nearly 50% of the nation’s underground stone mines found

  • NIOSH
    RI 9471 - Transverse-Mounted End-Cab Design for Low-Coal Shuttle Cars

    By Alan G. Mayton

    A prototype end-cab shuttle car (SC) design has been developed to improve protection and address ergonomic concerns of the SC operator in low coal mines. The new design features an end cab transversel

    Jan 1, 1993

  • NIOSH
    Thigh-Calf And Heel-Gluteus Contact Forces In High Flexion (Experimental Results) - Introduction

    By Jonisha P. Pollard

    In restricted vertical working heights such as low-seam coal mines, workers are forced to assume kneeling or squatting postures to perform work. These postures are associated

    Jan 1, 2009

  • NIOSH
    Industry / University Research & Development

    By Industrial Research Office

    "The U.S. Bureau of Mines established on August 15, 1983, the Generic Mineral Technology Center for Respirable Dust within the Mining and Mineral Resources Research Institutes (MRIs) at The Pennsylvan

    Aug 31, 1989

  • NIOSH
    Technology News - No. 490 - An Inexpensive Device for Monitoring Explosions in Sealed Areas of Underground Mines

    Objective To develop a passive, inexpensive technique for monitoring explosion overpressures within sealed areas in underground coalmines. Background From 1994 to 2000, seven explosions of me

    Jun 1, 2001

  • NIOSH
    Introduction (7540015d-9062-4067-8932-0f3020cba863)

    By Maria I. De Rosa

    Coal mine fires pose a constant danger to the safety of miners and to their livelihood. Underground mine fires pose an added hazard because of the confined environment with remote exits. Enactment of

    Jan 1, 2004