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RI 5675 Field Test For Cesium And Rubidium ? Summary And IntroductionBy K. C. Dean
A semiquantitative test for the presence and identification of cesium and rubidium in rocks, clays, and mineral waters has been developed by the Bureau of Mines. The test can be used in the field, as
Jan 1, 1960
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A Methodology for Determining the Mineral Content and Particle Size Distribution of Airborne Coal Mine DustBy H. Kim, R. W. Plummer, T. J. Stobbe, W. G. Jones
"Exposure to airborne dust in coal mines has caused respiratory disease in coal miners. The causal agent in these diseases remains unknown, although the minerals found in and around the coal seam have
Mar 1, 1989
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IC 6887 Mining And Grinding Methods And Costs At The L. W. Camp Co. Shale Pit, Akron, Ohio - IntroductionBy E. J. Lintner
This paper is one of a series being prepared by the United States Bureau of Mines describing clay mining and crushing methods and costs at various operations throughout the United States. These papers
Jan 1, 1936
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RI 5343 The Miners Queen Copper Deposit Skamania County, Wash. ? Introduction And SummaryBy E. A. Magill
The Bureau of Mines has begun a study of the copper resources of the Cascade Mountains of Washington. The program includes reconnaissance of mineralized areas and examination and occasionally limited
Jan 1, 1957
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RI 3258 Isolation and Study of the Humic Acids from PeatBy Chester L. Arnold, Reinhardt Thiessen, Alexander Lowy
"INTRODUCTION Peat is the accumulated mass of plant materials that remain after partial decay under specific conditions. In the swampy peat bogs dead material which falls on the surface immediately is
Nov 1, 1934
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RI 9205 Subsidence Due to Undermining of Sloping Terrain: A Case StudyBy Paul W. Jeran
Subsidence over a series of longwall panels undermining sloping terrain in southwestern Pennsylvania was monitored to verify the Bureau of Mines subsidence prediction model for the northern Appalachia
Jan 1, 1988
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Bulletin 35 The Utilization of Fuel in Locomotive PracticeBy W. F. M. GOSS
The locomotives in service on the railroads of this country consume more than one-fifth of the total coal production of the United States. The amount is so large that any small saving that can be made
Jan 1, 1911
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RI 6664 Some Thermal Properties Of Beryllium Fluoride From 8° To 1,200° KBy A. R. Taylor Jr.
The heat capacities of a-quartz form beryllium fluoride were measured at approximately 3° intervals from 8° to 300° K., using an adiabatic calorimeter. At 298.15° K the heat capacity and entropy were
Jan 1, 1965
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RI 4552 Coal Carbonization: Effects Of Blending Pocahontas No.3 Coal With 12 High-Volatile A CoalsBy D. A. Reynolds
The Bureau of Mines-American Gas Association survey of the carbonizing properties of American coals was begun in 1929, and has been continued almost without interruption since that time. Upwards of 10
Jan 1, 1949
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MLA 9-91 - Mineral Resource Investigation Of The Dixie Summit Study Area, Idaho County, IdahoBy Richard L. Rains
The Bureau of Mines conducted a mineral investigation of the 29,000-acre Dixie Summit area near Elk City, Idaho, during the summer of 1989. At the Petsite mine a marginally economic, identified resour
Jan 1, 1991
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RI 9386 - Modeling In Situ Copper Leaching in an Unsaturated SettingBy Michael J. Friedel
The permeability and flow capacity in unsaturated media are investigated by the U.S. Bureau of Mines for application to in situ copper leach mining. Moisture retention properties are derived and combi
Jan 1, 2010
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IC 6137 Work Of The Holmes Safety Association In The State Of Washington ? IntroductionBy J. G. Schoning
The Holmes Safety Association is an offspring of the Joseph A. Holmes Safety Association which was organized in Washington, D. C., in 1916 at a meeting of representatives of twenty-four leading mining
Jan 1, 1929
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IC 7072 Some Data On Dust In Industrial Work ? IntroductionBy D. Harrington
Although the hysteria. with regard to silicosis end other occupational diseases seems largely to haws passed, and more careful sober consideration is being given this subject, it would be very poor po
Jan 1, 1939
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IC 9374 The Prevalence Of Overexertion Injuries In The U.S. Metal-Nonmetal Mining IndustryBy Debra A. Griffith
The U.S. Bureau of Mines currently is researching the relationship between the level of back strength and the probability of low-back injury. This report is a review of the literature and statistics o
Jan 1, 1994
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IC 6138 Method And Cost Of Mining Hard Specular Hematite On The Marquette Range, Michigan ? IntroductionBy Lucien Eaton
The mining methods described in this paper are those used in a large mine producing hard specular ore on the Marquette Range in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Although the conditions of mining are u
Jan 1, 1929
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RI 3040 The Response of Japanese Waltzing Mice and Canaries to Carbon MonoxideBy H. H. Schrenk, L. B. Berger, W. P. Yant, F. A. Patty
"The use of small such as canaries and white mice, for detecting carbon monoxide depends primarily on the fact that the volume of respiration of these animals in proportion to their volume of blood is
Oct 1, 1930
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IC 9281 Cost-Benefit Analysis Of Computer-Assisted Mining Through Production And Cost ModelingBy Suresh K. Bhatt
A mathematically simulated modeling technique is used in this U.S. Bureau of Mines report to represent a hypothetical mining operation with existing mining technology and prevalent mining costs. Minin
Jan 1, 1991
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RI 5696 Evaluating One-Half Million Pounds Of Zirconium Sponge ? Introduction And SummaryBy M. D. Carver
This publication describes development by the Bureau of Mines of a quality evaluation procedure for certifying the adequacy of production lots of Kroll process zirconium sponge the Bureau had produced
Jan 1, 1960
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RI 7878 Rapid Identification of Copper-Base Alloys by Energy Dispersion X-Ray AnalysisBy Harold E. Marr
Energy dispersion X-ray analysis was evaluated for possible application in the secondary metals industries for the rapid analysis and identification of copper-base alloys. Laboratory investigations of
Jan 1, 1974
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RI 7580 Comparison Of Techniques For Electrowinning Tungsten From ScheeliteBy John M. Gomes
The Bureau of Mines investigated two techniques for removing CaO from scheelite (CaW04) prior to electrolysis. In the first technique, a crude tungstic oxide (WO3) containing 0.15-percent lime (CaO) w
Jan 1, 1971