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RI 2462 The Treatment Of Natural- Gas Gasoline To Meet The Doctor Test. ? IntroductionBy D. B. Dow
The presence of sulphur compounds in petroleum and its products is, generally speaking, undesirable, and the problems involved in removing such compounds are of great importance to the petroleum refin
Jan 1, 1923
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IC 8712 XRF4-Computer Programing For X-Ray AnalysisBy Harold E. Marr
The computer program XRF4 was designed by the Bureau of Mines to provide for the calculation of several different interelement correction procedures in X-ray fluorescence analysis, including Lachance-
Jan 1, 1976
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RI 6657 Relation Of Density And Porosity Data To Structural Features Of AnthraciteBy Jerry W. Ramsey
The Bureau of Mines examined a low-, a medium-, and a high-volatile Pennsylvania anthracite by densimetric methods using four mesh si.s of each anthracite. Using high-pressure mercury the macropore vo
Jan 1, 1965
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IC 7468 Safety Achievements of the Continental Mine, Continental-Archbald Coal Co., Scranton, Lackawanna County, PaBy H. A. Schrecengost, H. R. Gil, Alfred Clarkson, E. H. McCleary
Much has been written and many discussions have been held concerning the prevention of accidents in coal mines , and considerable progress has been made in eliminating hazards to the health and safety
Jun 1, 1948
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IC 6468 Iceland Apar and Optical FluoriteBy H. Herbert Hughes
Iceland spar is a variety of calcite ( calcium carbonate ) characterized by its purity , transparency , and perfection of crystalline structure . It takes its name from the country in which it was dis
Jul 1, 1931
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Bulletin 1 The Volatile Matter Of CoalBy Horace C. Porter, F. K. OVITZ
The various fuel investigations that were being carried on by the technologic branch of the United States Geological Survey were transferred by law on July 1, 1910, to a new federal bureau, the Bureau
Jan 1, 1910
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Bulletin 204 Underground Ventilation at ButteBy Daniel Harrington
For several years the United States Bureau of Mines has been making a study of ventilation in metal mines, this study covering practically all the important mining districts of the country. One of the
Jan 1, 1923
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RI 6747 In-Situ Measurement Of Rock Deformation In A Vein-Type Deep Mine (In Two Sections) 1. Instrumentation And Techniques 2. Analysis Of Measurements In The Star Mine Burke, IdahoBy Galen G. Waddell
Dilation and contraction of the rock surrounding horizontal access open-ings of a deep mine were analyzed during stope advance to determine what type of measurements, made with relatively inexpensive
Jan 1, 1966
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IC 9307 Preval: Prefeasibility Software Program For Evaluating Mineral PropertiesBy R. Craig Smith
This report presents the software documentation for PREY AL, a prefeasibility mineral property evaluation program developed by the U.S. Bureau of Mines on a Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet. It is presented in
Jan 1, 1992
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RI 6166 Oxidation Of Colorado Oil Shale ? SummaryBy W. E. Robinson
Samples of raw oil shale and kerogen concentrates were oxidized by alkaline potassium permanganate, air, nitric acid, oxygen, and ozone to obtain information about the chemical structure of organic ke
Jan 1, 1963
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Coal and Rock CuttingBy A. W. Khair, L. D. Gehl
"This paper describes the mechanism of coal and rock cutting from quasi-static indentation through dynamic indentation to rotary cutting. The results indicate that during quas~static indentation, a cr
Dec 1, 1995
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RI 4197 Heating Value Loss of Coal on Air DryingBy E. C. Tarpley, H. M. Cooper, R. F. Abernethy
The standard method of employing preliminary air-drying to determine the moisture in coal has been criticized with respect to the loss of heating value from excessive air-drying. By this method, the c
Feb 1, 1948
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IC 7651 The Lime Industry ? IntroductionBy Oliver Bowles
Manufacture of lime is one of the oldest industries. Plants are distributed widely and furnish an essential raw material for numerous commodities. Use of lime in hundreds of manufacturing and chemical
Jan 1, 1952
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OFR-109-76 Design And Recommended Specifications For A Safe Methane Gas Piping SystemBy David W. Tongue
This report describes the engineering work leading to the design of an underground coal mine piping system to transport approximately 2,000,000 cubic feet per day of methane gas to the surface from de
Jan 1, 2012
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Bulletin 188 Lessons From the Granite Mountain Shaft Fire, ButteBy Daniel Harrington
On the night of June 8, 1917, the flame of a carbide lamp accidentally set fire to the uncovered and frayed insulation of an armored power cable near the 2,400-foot level of the North Butte Mining CO.
Jan 1, 1922
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IC 7602 Mines And Mineral Deposits (Except Fuels) Judith Basin County, Mont.By Almon F. Robertson
This is one of a series of reports describing investigations made within the Missouri River Basin in Montana by mining engineers of the Bureau of Mines, Minerals Division, Region II. The primary purpo
Jan 1, 1951
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Bulletin 20 The Explosibility Of Coal DustBy George S. Rice
This bulletin traces the growth in the belief in the explosibility of coal dust, summarizes the experiments and mine investigations that have established this belief, and gives the present status of p
Jan 1, 1911
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OFR-105(3)-84 Ground And Air Vibrations Caused By Surface Blasting. Volume 3 Computer Simulation Predictor Of Ground Vibrations Induced By BlastingBy Ross. C. Barkley
A computer program has been written to simulate ground vibrations induced by multiple-hole surface blasts. The program is an inexpensive and relatively easy to use tool for predicting the principal bl
Jan 1, 1983
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RI 5124 Manganese From Steel-Plant Slags By A Lime-Clinkering And Carbonate-Leaching Process: Part 1. Laboratory Development (In Two Parts) ? SummaryBy R. August Heindl
A process for recovering manganese from open-hearth steel-plant slags was investigated. The proposed method of accomplishing this is indicated by the flow diagram in figure 1. Mixtures of open-hea
Jan 1, 1955
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IC 7430 Low-Temperature Carbonization of Coal in JapanBy William T. Reid
Low-temperature carbonization of coal in Japan served as an important source of liquid fuels during the war. Six plants operating in Japan Proper produced 203,069 KL (53.7 million gallons) of liquid f
Feb 1, 1948