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Building Risk Assessment For Urban Rail Transit Systems In India - Current Practices And ChallengesBy Manchanda H, Agarwal J.
The construction industry has one of the largest numbers of injuries compared to other industries. Thus, reducing accidents and determining construction risks are extremely important. One of the essen
Sep 1, 2022
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Building Safe, Productive Cultures and LeadershipBy M I. Roberts
Corporate and workplace culture, as many owners, directors, executives and managers know, is by far the most powerful determinant of productivity. It’s much more significant than buildings and equipme
Jun 22, 2016
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Bulk Explosives go Tunnelling in Hong KongThe constructionhunnelling industry in Hong Kong has taken an upturn during the last few years due to the commencement of works to relocate the International Airport to Chek Lap Kok Island. The Airp
Jan 1, 1994
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Bulk Explosives Testing at the Red Dog Mine in Northwestern AlaskaBy Norman Paley, John Kells
The climate and location of the Red Dog Mine present several challenges to blasting operations. The mine is located north of 68º latitude, in an area of continuous permafrost. Ground temperatures are
Jan 1, 2004
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Bulk Handling System Simulation - A Window On RealityBy Charles H. Ricker
Simulation models have been widely used to analyze the operations and characteristics of a variety of systems. Such models mimmick a projected reality by analyzing the interaction of the events, trans
Jan 1, 1974
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Bulk Handling Technology; Designing for the Future by Innovating the PresentBy R. Todd Swinderman
"Higher production demands across all bulk handling segments require increased efficiency at the lowest cost of operation, in the safest and most effective manner possible. As conveyor systems become
Jan 7, 2017
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Bulk Solids SamplingBy J E. Powalisz
Obtaining a representative sample of bulk materials in process industries is critical to providing valid data for process control and custody transfer (valuation). The accuracy of a sample, that is to
Jul 29, 2014
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Bulletin 103 Mining and Conentration of Carnotite OresBy John A. Davis, Karl L. Kithil
The principal deposits of carnotite, so far as now known, are con- fined to a well-defined area lying in the southwestern part of Colo- rado and the southeastern part of Utah (see Pl. I). Approxi- mat
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 107 Prospecting and Mining of Copper Ore At Santa Rita, N. MexBy Charles Enzian, Donald F. MacDonald
It is a far cry from the small and uncertain mining efforts of 50 years ago to the splendidly equipped and solidly financed organiza- tions that now handle thousands of tons of ore per day. The old mi
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 108 Melting Aluminum ChipsBy H. W. Gillett, G. M. JAMES
In its work on mineral wastes the Bureau of Mines is studying losses in the melting of nonferrous metals and alloys. The greatest of these losses is that of zinc through volatilization in brass meltin
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 114 Manufacture of Gasoline and Benzene Toluene from Petroleum and other HydrocarbonsBy C. B. DUTTON, W. F. RITTMAN, E. W. Dean, M. S. HOWARD
NOMENCLATURE USED IN THIS REPORT. In this report the ending ene has been used throughout, except in the bibliography and in quotations from the writings of previous investigators, for all aromatic hyd
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 115 Coal-Mine Fatilities in the United StatesBy Albert H. Fay
The first data compiled by the Bureau of Mines relating to coal- mine accidents in the United States were published in Bulletin 69," in which the total fatalities by years and States were tabulated fr
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 116 Methods of Sampling Delivered CoalBy GEORGE S. POPE
This bulletin is a revision of Bulletin 63 and is published by the Bureau of Mines in order that purchasers of coal for Government, State, municipal, or private use may be informed regarding advances
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 117 Structure in Paleozoic Bituminous CoalsBy Reinhardt Thiessen
Views and conceptions of the origin, composition, and general nature of coal differ so widely that to determine the real extent of actual knowledge is no easy matter. The chemist finds difficulty in a
Jan 1, 1920
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Bulletin 120 Extraction of Gasoline From Natural Gas by Absorption MethodsBy P. M. BIDDISON, G. G. Oberfell, George A. Burrell
The Bureau of Mines is conducting a series of investigations, with a view to ascertaining the most efficient methods of obtaining gasoline from petroleum and natural gas. This report deals with a meth
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 121 The History and Development of Gold Dredging in MontanaBy Charles Janin, HENNEN JENNINGS
Many articles have been written on the general principles and details of gold dredging, a but it is not possible within the limits of this paper to recapitulate them, and it is thus necessary to assum
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 124 Sandstone Quarrying in the United StatesBy Oliver Bowles
The term" sandstone" is applied to a rock composed of mineral grains smaller than pebbles, cemented together more or less firmly. "Conglomerate" is the name given to a rock composed of pebbles, or peb
Jan 1, 1917
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Bulletin 125 The Analytical Distillation of PetroleumBy W. F. RITTMAN, E. W. Dean
This report presents the results of an investigation conducted by the Bureau of Mines for the purpose of assisting in the establishment of a satisfactory standard method for the analytical distillatio
Jan 1, 1916
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Bulletin 127 Gold Dredging in the United StatesBy Charles Janin
The recovery of gold from sands and gravels is one of the oldest forms of mining; it antedates history and has been practiced by savage peoples. In North America the search for placer gold has been a
Jan 1, 1918
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Bulletin 129 The Fusibility of Coal Ash and The Determination of the Softening TemperatureBy ALBERT E. HALL, Arno C. Fieldner, Alexander L. Field
As a safeguard against excessive clinker troubles, specifications for the purchase of coal can be drawn to include the "softening" or "fusing" temperature of the ash. The value of such information has
Jan 1, 1918