Search U.S. government technical reports digitized or harvested by TRAIL.
Some phases of the relative responsibility of management and workers for accidents in mines
Work of the Safety Division of the United States Bureau of Mines :fiscal year 1930
Progress in metal-mine ventilation in 1930
Mine explosions and fires in the United States during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1931
Gases that Occur in Metal Mines
Rock-dust does stop or limit mine explosions
Hazards to underground workers from inflammable surface structures near mine openings
The importance of discipline in mine safety
Mine explosions and fires in the United States during the fiscal year which ended June 20, 1932
Metal-mine fires and ventilation
Operating coal mines without accidents
Mine explosions and fires in the United States during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1933
Review of literature on effects of breathing dusts with special reference to silicosis.
Coal-mine explosions and fires in the United States during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1934
Review of literature on effects of breathing dusts with special reference to silicosis.
Review of literature on effects of breathing dusts with special reference to silicosis.
Accident costs and safety dividends
Review of literature on effects of breathing dusts with special reference to silicosis.
The Joseph A. Holmes safety association and its awards
Silicosis as affecting mining workmen and operations
Preventing accidents by the proper use of permissible explosives
Coal-mine explosions and fires in the United States :during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1935
How to use permissible explosives properly
Review of literature on effects of breathing dusts with special reference to silicosis.
What's wrong with mine safety programs
Dust hazards and their control in mining
Review of Literature on Effects of Breathing Dusts with Special Reference to Silicosis
Forwarding health and safety in coal mining by use of watering methods
Some observations on coal-mine fans and coal-mine ventilation
Review of literature on conditioning air for advancement of health and safety in mines
Thousands killed by coal-mine explosions in the United States
Reducing cost of workmen's compensation in the mining industry
Methods for protection against silicosis and when they are justified
Some of the results of recent research on the control or prevention of silicosis
Necessity for more extended use of safety equipment in mining
Safe storage, handling, and use of commercial explosives
Safety work of the Bureau of Mines and some of its results
Some of the welfare problems of the mining industry and what the Bureau of Mines has done about them
Some data on dust in industrial work
Allaying dust in bituminous-coal mines with water