Mining Publication: Improving Safety at Small Underground Mines: Proceedings: Bureau of Mines Technology Transfer Seminar
Original creation date: January 1994
This U.S. Bureau of Mines report identifies the types of serious accidents that occur most frequently at small underground coal mines and describes the strategies that could help prevent these accidents. A wide variety of methods for improving safety are suggested, including improvements in the design of equipment, work procedures, work schedules, safety programs, and emergency response plans, as well as techniques for diagnosing the potential hazards associated with new technologies and work procedures. Some of the papers in this volume focus on preventing specific types of mining accidents--ones associated with materials handling (primarily back injuries), equipment maintenance, improper machine guarding, and ground failure during retreat mining. Although the recommendations in this volume are heavily influenced by research performed at underground coal mines in the Appalachian coalfields, most of the papers contain advice that is equally pertinent to almost any type of mine.
Authors: RH Peters
NIOSH/USBM Numbered Publication - January 1994
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 10005494
United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines SP 18-94, 1994; :174 pp
See Also
- The Availability of Primary Copper in Market Economy Countries: A Minerals Availability Appraisal
- Coal-Dust Explosion Tests in the Experimental Mine 1919 to 1924, Inclusive
- Design of Proximity Systems for Underground Mobile Equipment
- History of the Mining Program
- Laboratory Investigation of Seat Suspension Design Performance during Vibration Testing
- NIOSH Mining Update - New Publications 1995-96
- Pressure Monitoring and Observed Effects of Mining at the Oak Grove, AL, Coalbed Degasification Pattern
- Proceedings of Thru-The-Earth Electromagnetics Workshop
- Self-Reported Musculoskeletal Symptoms Among Operators of Heavy Construction Equipment
- Task Analysis
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program