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3. On an Instrument for detecting Coal-Gas in Mines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

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Extract

In 1877, shortly after the disastrous colliery explosion in the Blantyre pit, in which hundreds of lives were lost, Mr James Young, F.R.S., of Kelly, described to me an instrument which he had thought of for determining what is the amount of fire-damp in any part of a mine. This was the first thing which directed my attention to the subject, and I very soon saw that there was a principle in acoustics which might be most admirably adapted to the end in view, viz., to determine the quantity of fire-damp (or marsh gas) by the diminution in density of the mixed air and gas (for marsh gas is only about half the density of air). Mr Young and myself tested the principle the next day, and found it to be one of extreme delicacy.

Type
Proceedings 1879–80
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1880

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