Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
IC 7178 Multiple-Shift Mechanical Mining In Some Bituminous-Coal Mines. Progress Report 3By Albert L. Toenges
This paper is the third of a series4/ that describes some methods and practices of mining coal mechanically where operations are conducted on more than one shift. The mining of coal by means of mechan
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7180 Mercury Poisoning As A Mining Hazard - IntroductionBy Sara J. Davenport
With the increased demand for mercury incident to preparations for national defense and the reduction in imports from some of the usual sources owing to war conditions, many small mines in the United
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7181 Status Of Safety In Mining ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
The mining industry of the United States has-long been severely criticized because of its high rate of accident occurrence, net only as compared with other major industries-in the United States but al
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7182 Review Of Literature On Conditioning Air For Advancement Of Health And Safety In Mines - Part II. Need For Air Conditioning Indicated By Physical Quality Of Underground Air ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
This circular is part II of a series of papers reviewing the literature on air conditioning in mines with particular reference to the health, safety, and efficiency of employees. It deals with the phy
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7184 Marketing Feldspar ? PropertiesBy Robert W. Metcalf
The feldspars are a series of related aluminum silicates containing varying proportions of potash, soda, rind lime; smaller amounts of other minerals arc likely to be present as impurities. They compr
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7188 Field Performance of Permissible Electric Cap LampsBy A. B. Hooker
Nineteen of the installations were on rental contracts 1.L."'1der whtch the lamps belong to the lamp company and are rented by t.½em to the mine operatj.nt; company. · The other nine installations had
Jan 1, 1942
-
IC 7190 Annual Report Of Research And Technologic Work On Coal, Fiscal Year 1941 ? ForewordBy A. C. Fieldner
Much activity is called for in the present period of hightened national effort, and wise direction of such a program must always be conditioned by positive knowledge gained in years of slow and painst
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7191 Prevention Of Premature Shots During Springing Of Deep Drill Holes In Quarries And Open-Pit Workings - IntroductionBy D. Harrington
Springing or chambering of deep drill holes is common practice in some quarries. It involves definite hazards from premature explosion during placing of the springing charges or the final charge due c
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7192 Occurrences And Uses Of Dolomite In The United States ? IntroductionBy Shirley F. Colby
Much interest has been shown recently in the possible utilization of dolomite as a source of magnesium metal, a large production of which is deemed essential for national defense. As a result, many in
Jan 1, 1941
-
IC 7193 The Various B. t. u. Values of a CoalBy L. R. Burdick, J. F. Barkley
The inherent heating value or the amount of heat that will be produced when a coal is completely burned is measured in British thermal units (B. t. u.) per pound of coal . This standard heat unit is t
Dec 1, 1941
-
IC 7194 Mining And Milling Methods And Costs At The Yellow Pine Mine, Stibnite, Idaho - Mining Methods And Costs - Introduction And HistoryBy John D. Bradley
Stibnite is 76 miles east of Cascade, Idaho, which is 78 miles due north of Boise. The altitude at Stibnite is 6,500 feet, and between Cascade and Stibnite the Forest Service road crosses two summits
Jan 1, 1942
-
IC 7195 Lightweigbt Aggregates for ConcreteBy Forrest T. Moyer
Need for lightweight building materials was created in the latter part of the nineteenth century by a radical change in building design in which dead load or structural weight was transferred from thi
Jan 1, 1942
-
IC 7197 Chalk And Whiting ? Introduction And AcknowledgmentsBy Oliver Bowles
Whiting or Paris white is a fine-grained preparation of calcium carbonate having a wide variety of uses. Until recent years it was prepared almost exclusively from certain north European chalks. With
Jan 1, 1942
-
IC 7201 Novel First-Aid Instructors Association ? IntroductionBy Albert A. Munsch
The Munsch National First-Aid Instructors Association had its inception during the teaching of a Federal Bureau of Mines first-aid instructors' class at McPherson, Kans., under a cooperative plan
Jan 1, 1942
-
IC 7202 Marketing Silica (Quartz, Tripoli, Diatomite, Etc.) ? IntroductionBy Nan C. Jensen
Silica, the world's most abundant mineral compound, is composed of the two commonest elements - oxygen and silicon. In addition to being the life-giving constituent of the atmosphere and the majo
Jan 1, 1942
-
IC 7204 1942-02 Tentative coal mine inspection standards"These tentative coal mine inspection standards have been prepared as a guide for the Federal inspection of coal mines of the United States. Much time and thought have been spent by various members of
Feb 1, 1942
-
IC 7206 New Process For Controlling Mercury Vapor ? IntroductionBy Merle Randall
Application of a new chemical spray in a mercury mine in which ore rich in native metal was causing salivation among the miners has given such favorable results that it is believed the process will be
Jan 1, 1942
-
IC 7209 Findings from Major Studies of FatigueBy R. R. Sayers
Under compuision of the present urgency to implement the President's promise to make the United States the arsenal for the democracies there is a tendency to demand a relaxation of restrictions on hou
Jun 1, 1942
-
IC 7212 Sodium CarbonateBy Charles L. Harness, A. T. Coons
Sodium carbonate, Na2CO3, more commonly known as soda ash, is the most important of the alkalies. Sulfuric acid is the only heavy chemical, Soda ash enters the market either as the natural product or
Jun 1, 1942
-
IC 7218 Proposed Methods And Estimated Costs Of Mining Oil Shale At Rulison, Colo. ? IntroductionBy E. D. Gardner
Oil shale, a long-considered potential source of motor fuel in the United States, is found over an extensive area in the Green River formation in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming.4/ Oil has been retorte
Jan 1, 1942