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“ BREATHE AND LIVE " VENTILATION IN METAL AND NON-METAL MINES 1970s MINING SAFETY TRAINING JC10124 

PeriscopeFilm
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This 1970s color film produced by the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Mines stresses the benefits of mine ventilation systems to the underground miner. Booster fans, air curtains, ventilation tubes, and other methods of avoiding unventilated “dead end” zones are introduced in dramatized safety demonstrations that warn of carbon monoxide poisoning and gas exposure (TRT: 20:24).
Snow covered mountains and coniferous trees (0:08). Opening titles: “Breathe and Live: Ventilation in Metal and Non-Metal Mines” (0:40). Exterior: A mining operation. Miners wearing safety glasses and hardhats ride a mine shaft elevator (0:55). A disgruntled miner on the subject of fresh air: “You ain’t getting it, mister, and you know it.” Another says, “When the air’s close, brother, you can tell” (1:29). A rescue team wearing respirator masks investigates the disappearance of miners in a sulfide copper mine. They find an abandoned vehicle and unconscious men. The rescuers confirm they have no pulse (2:06). In an ore mine, a drill and a hole producing water. A miner approaches. Hydrogen sulfide gas bubbles in the water. The miner recoils and runs away grabbing his eyes (3:36). A ventilation exhaust fan is under repair. Another dead body is seen near the bubbling pool. Two men go to investigate and they too succumb. Still more bodies pile up at the gas leak (4:33). Two miners work to repair a slusher. One man wanders off and doesn’t return. His unconscious body is found on a higher level of the mine (5:18). Miners suit up for work in a locker room. A manager gives a lecture to miners (6:23). An animated illustration shows a mine ventilation system’s airflow from an intake, through blasting operations to a bulkhead and an exhaust fan. A booster fan and an auxiliary fan are indicated near a cluster of miners at work (6:57). The bulkhead is damaged, and contaminated air blows to the work site (8:10). Ventilation doors, bulkheads, overcasts, and ventilation tubing are depicted (8:27). A slusherman opens a ventilation regulator. In the next airway, ventilation is disrupted (9:07). A miner opens a door labeled, “Keep this Door Closed.” Other miners tamper with vent tubing for their comfort while another man suffers (10:05). A miner turns off a fan. Later, two miners walk into “a virtual inferno” (10:49). A miner moves to a quieter area away from a fan to enjoy lunch. Men hang vent tubing and patch leaks (11:26). Idle workers wait while an area is ventilated. Miners eat lunch while blasting is done (12:22). A man wearing a mask uses a hose to wet down a blast site (13:00). Suspect narration: “The odds are 99 to 1 that you will breathe good air, shift in, shift out, week after week, year after year...” (13:19). A miner addresses the camera in closeup: “You can’t depend on your sense of feel or smell.” A miner checks an area with a flashlight. A montage of air quality measuring tools in use (13:40). A mine shaft is ventilated. A miner reports an air quality concern to his foreman (14:38). Accidents in need of reporting: A tram crashes through a bulkhead. A damaged vent tubing. An inactive fan (15:15). A foreman performs an air check (16:16). A flashing lightbulb and alarm. A detailed escape route is illustrated on a map (16:35). A miner speaks: “Asphyxiation. They say it’s like drowning. Man, I want no part of that.” A mechanically operated doorway opens for a passing vehicle (18:27). A roll-up door. A heating unit. A refrigerator unit. Evaporative cooling towers (18:56). A montage of miners crossfades to clear skies (19:35). The U.S. Department of the Interior logo and acknowledgements (19:53).
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This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com

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10 сен 2021

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Комментарии : 11   
@SomeCanine
@SomeCanine 2 года назад
Why yes, RU-vid, I do want to watch an old safety video about air ventilation in mines. Thank you.
@kingfish4575
@kingfish4575 2 года назад
A sea of 70s stashes! also, informative 👌
@steeplecab
@steeplecab 2 года назад
That reminds me so much of my time underground. And yeah, it was the '70s, so it all looks so familiar, down to the scraggly mustaches on the young guys. I gotta say they did have a nicer doghouse though.
@williamkholmes
@williamkholmes 2 года назад
Huu luan, I was watching much of your UGA content but that awful. Blaring loud ending showking s Chinese river and terraced farms .. is totally out of synch with modern version deo minimum standards . Do you think it cool or stylish and you plan to use to identify your brand cthen contact Mr. I camaybe help with a talebtedvrye and mature sensevof style fashion and what is proper and what is not at all proper. It completely ruins your videos... who or what ever gave you any notion that it was cool to do that. It is such an abrasive, grating, and not at all smart ending of your borrowed videos. You should credit the Makers but for ?just
@kdawson020279
@kdawson020279 2 года назад
This happens in a lot of industries because people get complacent. By the time you'd figure out it was unsafe there would be no escape.
@glocke380
@glocke380 2 года назад
I did not see one person that wasn't wearing glasses, and they aren't just flat lenses, I could see the curvature of corrective lenses.
@steeplecab
@steeplecab 2 года назад
80% of them were MSHA approved safety glasses. Not wearing them on the job was one of the things our shift boss would really get after us about. As a trammer, I didn't like that they limited my peripheral vision, but they did did protect against small rocks bouncing around loading and dumping cars.
@kennethjohnson6319
@kennethjohnson6319 2 года назад
Just think back in the 1800s when mining was very dangerous they had to use canaries to find out if you have poisonous gas mining has come a long way by having a good ventilation system to work safely in the mining industry
@napalmholocaust9093
@napalmholocaust9093 2 года назад
"No one likes asphyxiation." ~David Carradine.
@sayloltothetroll6806
@sayloltothetroll6806 2 года назад
Did Alfred Hitchcock make this?
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