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United States Bureau of Mines
Industry: Mining
Number of terms: 33118
Number of blossaries: 0
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The U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) was the primary United States Government agency conducting scientific research and disseminating information on the extraction, processing, use, and conservation of mineral resources. Founded on May 16, 1910, through the Organic Act (Public Law 179), USBM's missions ...
An airway along the side of an adit or shaft.
Industry:Mining
An airway along the side of an adit or shaft.
Industry:Mining
An Alaskan term for fine gravel 1/2 in (1.27 cm) or less in diameter.
Industry:Mining
An alkali gabbro primarily composed of plagioclase, hornblende, biotite, and titanaugite, with lesser amounts of alkali feldspar and nepheline. Essexite grades into theralite with a decrease in potassium feldspar and an increase in the feldspathoid minerals. Its name is derived from Essex County, MA.
Industry:Mining
An alkalic syenite containing more than 10% modal feldspathoids and characterized by porphyritic texture. Also spelled lardalite. The name, given by Broegger in 1890, is for Laurdal, Norway.
Industry:Mining
An alkalic syenite, grading to monzonite, composed of phenocrysts of two feldspars (esp. oligoclase and alkali feldspar), often intimately intergrown, which comprise up to 90% of the rock, with diopsidic augite and titanaugite as the chief mafic minerals, and accessory apatite (generally abundant), ilmenite, and titaniferous magnetite, and less commonly olivine, bronzite, lepidomelane, and quartz or feldspathoids (less than 10% by volume). Its name, given by Broegger in 1890, is derived from Larvik, Norway. Also spelled laurvikite.
Industry:Mining
An alkalic syenite, grading to monzonite, composed of phenocrysts of two feldspars (esp. oligoclase and alkali feldspar), often intimately intergrown, which comprise up to 90% of the rock, with diopsidic augite and titanaugite as the chief mafic minerals, and accessory apatite (generally abundant), ilmenite, and titaniferous magnetite, and less commonly olivine, bronzite, lepidomelane, and quartz or feldspathoids (less than 10% by volume). Its name, given by Broegger in 1890, is derived from Larvik, Norway. Also spelled laurvikite.
Industry:Mining
An allotropic, triatomic form of oxygen, O<sub>3</sub>; a faintly blue, irritating gas with a characteristic pungent odor, but at -112 degrees C it condenses to a blue magnetic liquid. It occurs in minute quantities in the air near the Earth's surface and in larger quantities in the stratosphere as a product of the action of ultraviolet light of short wavelengths on ordinary oxygen. Ozone is generated usually in dilute form by a silent electric discharge in oxygen or air. It decomposes to oxygen (as when heated) and it is a stronger oxidizing agent than oxygen. Used chiefly in disinfection and in deodorization (such as in water purification and in air conditioning), in oxidation and bleaching (such as in the treatment 2230 of industrial wastes), and in ozonolysis (such as in the manufacture of azelaic acid from oleic acid).
Industry:Mining
An allowance to miners on piecework who are rendered idle during a shift owing to circumstances beyond their control, such as a breakdown in power services, or supplies of empty cars.
Industry:Mining
An alloy composed mainly of copper and tin. Various other elements may be added in small amounts for certain specific purposes. A number of copper alloys are referred to as bronzes, although they contain no tin. The American Society for Testing and Materials has classified all copper-based alloys on a basis of composition ranges of the principal alloying elements.
Industry:Mining