Damp (mining)

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Historically, gases (other than air) in coal mines in Britain were collectively known as "damps". This comes from the Middle Low German word damp (meaning "vapour"), and was in use by 1480 [1].

Damps included:

The term damp also gives rise to damp sheet, a heavy curtain used to direct air currents and prevent the buildup of dangerous gases.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ OED
  2. ^ Notes of an Enquiry into the Nature and Physiological Actin of Black-Damp, as Met with in Podmore Colliery, Staffordshire, and Lilleshall Colliery, Shropshire, John Haldane, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Vol. 57, 1894 - 1895 (1894 - 1895), pp. 249-257


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