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Portable Rock Crusher - ObjectiveProvide a portable crushing capability to keep conveyor haulage close to the working face and permit more efficient and safer ore handling in low headroom, hardrock mines. Approach A readily port
Jan 1, 1981
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Statistical Summary (ecbc64e0-a390-45f6-a086-708a6a65c155)By Rose L. Ballard
This chapter summarizes data on crude nonfuel mineral production for the United States, its island possessions, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Included also are tables that show the principal no
Jan 1, 1981
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RI 2127 The Uses of Talc and SoapstoneBy Raymond B. Ladoo
The uses of talc are many but are not, in general well known or fully developed within the last decade several companies have realized the possibilities of greatly increased use and have intelligently
May 1, 1920
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RI 2488 Who May Set Off Blasts In Coal Mines? (State regulations relating thereto)By L. C. IlsLey
"According to accident statistics, issued from time to time by the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines covering fatalities in coal mines, between the years 1870 and 1921 there were 4,897 death
Jun 1, 1923
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IC 7187 Index To Location Of Stone Quarries In The United States ? IntroductionBy M. G. Downey
The stone resources in certain localities and the kinds of stone available often influence manufacturing companies in their choice of plant location and in possible expansion of their activities. Lime
Jan 1, 1941
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RI 4469 Investigation Of Red-Back Magnetite Mine Sterling Lake, Orange County, N. Y.By W. T. Millar
Magnetite mines in the Sterling tract, Orange County, N. Y., were operated almost continuously from pre-Revolutionary days until 1923. The Red-Back mine, one of several in this tract, was discovered i
Jan 1, 1949
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Improved Blast Designs Reduce Rockfall Hazards ? ObjectiveDevelop improved blasting practices that can help to curb overbreak in highwalls at surface mines, thereby reducing the hazards of rock-falls to workers and equipment, The Problem The serious
Jan 1, 1985
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An Overview Of Geomechanics Safety Research On Mobile Roof SupportsBy John Owens, Wayne Howie, Hamid Maleki
After an analysis of the hazards of room-and-pillar retreat mining systems, it became apparent that safety could be significantly improved by considerations of (1) human factors, (2) remotely control
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RI 8780 Reducing Longwall Tailgate Workers' Dust Exposure Utilizing Water-Powered ScrubbersBy John A. Organiscak
Laboratory and underground studies were conducted by the Bureau of Mines to evaluate the effectiveness of a water-powered scrubber and a brattice partition to create a clean split of air for longwall
Jan 1, 1983
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Modeling And Prediction Of Ventilation Methane Emissions Of U. S. Longwall Mines Using Supervised Artificial Neural NetworksBy C. Özgen Karacan
Methane emissions from a longwall ventilation system are an important indicator of how much methane a particular mine is producing and how much air should be provided to keep the methane levels under
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IC 7548 Safety Practices in Churn Drilling at Morenci Branch, Phelps Dodge Corp. Morenci, ARIZBy Allen D. Look, Alan A. Sharp
"Churn drills for blast-hole drilling are important to the operation of most open-pit metal mines, but certain hazards are created through their use that cause fatal and nonfatal accidents.2/ The purp
Jan 1, 1950
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RI 2390 The New Albany Shale of IndianaBy John R. Reeves
The principal oil aha.le in Indiana ie known as the New Al'baZ\Y shale. It 11 ot Devonian age, and ia usually correlated with, although not certainly of the 1ame age a,, the Antrim shale of northern
Aug 1, 1922
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RI 7893 Compound-Type Separation and Characterization Studies for a 370° to 535° C Distillate of Wilmington, Calif., Crude OilBy D. E. Hirsch
A systematic procedure for separation, characterization, and semiquantitative analysis of high-boiling petroleum distillates was developed by the Bureau of Mines and applied to a 370° to 535° C distil
Jan 1, 1974
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RI 7668 An In-Situ Diffusion Parameter For The Pittsburgh And Pocahontas No. 3 Coalbeds (5b308a1a-1c6f-474e-8451-9329f4c67a64)By Fred N. Kissell
In this report the importance of diffusion in controlling the emission of methane in mines is examined. An in-situ diffusion parameter is defined and calculated for a hypothetical unfractured lump of
Jan 1, 1972
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RI 6090 Some Characteristics Of Iron In The Lime Soda Sinter Process For Recovering Alumina From Anorthosite ? Summary And IntroductionBy R. V. Lundquist
The work described in this report, part of the Bureau of Mines long-range program to develop methods of utilizing submarginal domestic sources of aluminum, was undertaken to investigate the effects of
Jan 1, 1962
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RI 2319 Prevention of Illnesses Among MinersBy P. A. Surgeon, R. R. Sayers
It is not the purpose of this report to try to describe all the work done during the past year for the improvement of health or the prevention of illness among miners , but to call attention to a few
Feb 1, 1922
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RI 7686 Dispersion Strengthening Of Internally Oxidized Iron-Aluminum AlloysBy Mark I. Copeland
The formation of A1203 dispersoids 0,14 and less in size in dilute iron-aluminum alloys by internal oxidation in wet hydrogen and dispersion strengthening of iron by application of the technique to ir
Jan 1, 1972
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IC 7346 A Graphical Form For Applying The Rosin And Rammler Equation To The Size Distribution Of Broken Coal ? IntroductionBy W. S. Landers
Analysis of the size consist of broken coal has been extended in recent years beyond the mere representation of the relative quantities of the various sizes present in a given lot of the material. Fun
Jan 1, 1946
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RI 2337 The Northwest Experiment Station of the Federal Bureau of MinesBy Clyde E. Williams
The Northwest experiment station of the Federal Bureau of Mines , at Seattle , Wash . , was established in December , 1916 , and is one of 13 mining experiment stations maintained by Act of Congress ,
Mar 1, 1922
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RI 3399 Bureau Of Mines Apparatus For Determining The Dew Point Of Gases Under Pressure (390615de-ba93-426d-8289-f586a076ee3c)By W. M. Deaton
[Knowledge of the ten?erat~rre to wkich n gas ullder3atur~ted xith re- srplc t to water vapor may be cooled before the water p?f 11 3egin to condense 8 is desirable .and frec-uently iq neceTsarp in nW
Jan 1, 1938