Modify Selection
- Products and materials:
- Dusts
- or
- Respirable dust
- or
- Diesel particulate matter
- or
- Coal dust
- or
- Silica dust
- or
- Limestone dust
- or
- Float dust
- or
- Asbestos dust
Home Links
Results 1 - 9 of 9
-
4/18/2013 - Training materials, Videos and multimediaThis is a series of 5 videos explaining how to use the coal dust explosibility meter.
-
10/24/2020 - Conferences, workshops, and seminars, PresentationsNIOSH-MSHA Silica Exposure and Lung Disease in the Mining Industry workshop
-
3/1/2009 - Videos and multimediaThis video identifies significant factors that determine how effective an enclosed cab will be at protecting a worker.
-
8/18/2008 - Videos and multimedia'Faces of Black Lung' features two miners who share their stories and provide insight on how their lives have changed due to this devastating black lung disease.
-
1/1/2004 - Training materials, Videos and multimediaThis clothes cleaning system is a quick, safe, and effective method to safely remove dust from a worker's clothing without exposing the worker, the work environment, or co-workers to respirable dust.
-
11/1/1998 - Hazard ControlsExposure to airborne respirable crystalline silica dust can lead to silicosis, a debilitating lung disease. On surface coal mining and construction sites, blast hole drills are notorious sources of airborne respirable dust that may contain significant a...
-
1/1/2012 - Guides and manuals, Reports of InvestigationsMined ore undergoes crushing, grinding, cleaning, drying, and product sizing as it is processed, generating harmful dust. This handbook reviews technologies for lowering dust levels below the permissible or recommended occupational exposure limits.
-
This handbook was developed to identify available engineering controls that can assist underground and surface metal/nonmetal mining operations in reducing worker exposure to respirable silica dust.
-
This handbook was developed to identify available engineering controls that can help the industry reduce worker exposure to respirable coal and silica dust.
Home Links
Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program