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Safety Practices In Dredging And Hydraulic Mining - IntroductionBy R. W. Fatzinger
The accident-frequency rate for placer mining in 1942 is reported as 36.923 accidents per million man-hours worked. This figure places placer-mining accident frequency slightly higher than that given
Jan 1, 1948
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Evaluation Of Deep-Seated Crib Block Fires And Direct Application Fire Suppression AgentsBy M. A. Trevits, J. E. Urosek, A. C. Smith, M. P. Valoski
Unlike other types of mining accidents, where an incident generally involves only a few workers, the danger of a mine fire extends to every person working in the underground environment. Mine fires ca
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MLA 57-87 - Mineral Resources Of The Sheep Mountain Study Area, Baker County, Oregon ? SummaryBy Terry J. Close
In 1986 and 1987, at the request of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Bureau of Mines personnel studied 7,040 acres of the 7,240-acre Sheep Mountain Wilderness Study Area (OR-006-003) in order
Jan 1, 1987
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IC 8107 Platinum Expansion Values For Thermal Calibration Of High-Temperature X-Ray Diffraction Cameras And DiffractometersBy William J. Campbell
Expansion measurements of platinum, added as an internal standard, are used for thermal calibration of X-ray cameras and diffractometers. Accuracy of the temperatures derived by this technique depends
Jan 1, 1962
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OFR-10-77 Analysis Of Noncoal Mine Atmospheres: Toxic Fumes From ExplosivesBy Sheridan J. Rodgers
Toxic fumes generated during shot firing were measured in a phosphate rock mine and a copper mine. Fumes generated during firing of explosives in the Bureau of Mines 1350 ft3 test chamber were measure
Jan 1, 1976
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IC 8337 Injury Experience In The Metallic Mineral Industries, 1961-63By Forrest T. Moyer
The overall injury experience, excluding officeworkers, at metal mines and mills during the period 1961-63, reported by operators, was 174 fatal and 11,357 nonfatal disabling work injuries during an a
Jan 1, 1967
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Analysis Of Metal And Nonmetal Mine Fire Incidents In The United States From 1950 To 1984 ? The ProblemMine fires pose a serious hazard to the health and safety of mine workers. They occur regularly and their effects can be devastating. Objective Provide mine safety personnel, MSHA, and equipmen
Jan 1, 1988
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IC 6431 Street Paving In Representative American Cities, 1925-1929 ? IntroductionBy Arthur H. Redfield
The expansion of city street laving which characterized the ten years ended December 31, 1929, according to a survey of 201 representative cities, made by the bureau of Mines, reached it climax in 192
Jan 1, 1931
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RI 7768 Gases Desorbed From Five Coals Of Low Gas Content (73c58934-f8ad-4018-9023-1b01fc834bd4)By A. G. Kim
Methane and other hydrocarbon gases, byproducts of coalification, are emitted from coal at widely varying rates and often present ventilation problems during mining. The air in some coal mines apparen
Jan 1, 1973
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MLA 44-82 - Mineral Resource Potential Of The Freel Peak Rare II Area (No. 5271), El Dorado County, California ? SummaryBy Thomas J. Peters
In 1979 and 1980, the U.S. Bureau of Mines and U.S. Geological Survey conducted a mineral survey of the 15,600 acre (6,310 ha) Freel Peak RARE II area (No. 5271) in the Lake Tahoe Management Unit. T
Jan 1, 1982
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The Mineral Industry Of Alabama (dbd74d9b-7f5a-49e1-b014-9c657e7976d2)By Ronald B. Hollenbeck
The value of mineral production in Alabama continued to increase and reached a new high of $260 million, 3 percent above the previous high established in 1967. Record high values were reported for ben
Jan 1, 1970
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IC 8774 State Severance Taxes On Nonfuel Minerals As Of January 1, 1978By Phillip N. Yasnowsky
This Bureau of Mines publication tabulates State taxes levied on nonfuel minerals that have the characteristics of a severance tax.
Jan 1, 1978
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Brass-Furnace Practice In The United States. - Introduction.By H. W. Gillett
This bulletin is issued by the Bureau of Mines as a contribution to the increase of safety and efficiency in the preparation and utilization of the mineral resources in the United States. Notable amon
Jan 1, 1916
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A Multi-Body Dynamic Biomechanical Model Of A Seated Human Exposed To Vertical Whole-Body Vibration - IntroductionBy R. Demont, A. Pranesh, S. Rakheja
Ethical concerns of in-vivo procedures and poor repeatability of non-invasive techniques have been major limitations in estimating vibration-induced spine loads through experiments. The biodynamic mod
Jan 6, 2006
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MLA 11-83 - Mineral Investigation Of The Bear Canyon Rare II Area (No. 5104), Monterey County, CaliforniaBy John R. Benham
The Bureau of Mines examined the Bear Canyon RARE II area in 1982. The area has no identified mineral deposits. The few claims that were located in the study area are devoid of any workings. No concen
Jan 1, 1983
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IC 8175 The Application Of Hydraulic Fracturing In The Recovery Of Oil By Waterflooding: A Summary (70dc5043-3530-4999-9ad0-996ab55129a4)By James A. Wasson
This report summarizes the results and conclusions reached by various investigators who have attempted to determine the extent to which hydraulic fracturing will affect the secondary recovery of crude
Jan 1, 1963
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Bulletin 199 Experimental Production of Alloy SteelsBy H. W. GILLETr, E. L. Mack
The production of small heats of alloy steels on an experimental scale is often desirable in beginning the study of new alloy steels before large amounts of expensive alloys are used in heats of comme
Jan 1, 1922
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Abrasive Materials (MATERIALS MINERALS YEARBOOK-1980)By G. David Baskin
Changes in the 1978 quantity and value of the sales of various natural abrasives, compared with the data for 1977, were of a mixed nature. Output of tripoli-type materials and garnet increased in both
Jan 1, 1980
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Sand & Gravel Operator Mining Facts ? 2006 - Mining OperationsIn 2006, a total of 7,178 sand and gravel mining operations reported employment to the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA).1 ? Sand and gravel mines were the largest mining sector, compri
Sep 1, 2008
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RI 2507 Oxygen-Oil ExplosionsBy Mayo D. Hersey
This problem was taken up by the Bureau of Mines as a result of the oxygen explosion at the Jefferson Physical Laboratory of Harvard University , and other similar explosions , in order to supply tech
Jul 1, 1923