United States Bureau of Mines
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United States Bureau of Mines
Summary
United States Bureau of Mines is a government agency[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of government_agency entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (30 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- United States Bureau of Mines's field of work was mining[3].
- United States Bureau of Mines's field of work was mining safety[4].
- United States Bureau of Mines is in the country of United States[5].
- United States Bureau of Mines's instance of is recorded as government agency[6].
- United States Bureau of Mines's seal image is recorded as Bureau of Mines-Transparent.png[7].
- United States Bureau of Mines's headquarters location is recorded as Washington, D.C.[8].
- United States Bureau of Mines's ISNI is recorded as 0000000122941336[9].
- United States Bureau of Mines's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 147093372[10].
- United States Bureau of Mines's GND ID is recorded as 35614-1[11].
- United States Bureau of Mines's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as n79063444[12].
- United States Bureau of Mines's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 11884337g[13].
- United States Bureau of Mines's IdRef ID is recorded as 026633310[14].
- United States Bureau of Mines's NACSIS-CAT author ID is recorded as DA01913847[15].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as NIOSH Pittsburgh Mining Research Division[16].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as NIOSH Spokane Mining Research Division[17].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Albany Research Center[18].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Bureau of Mines Washington Office[19].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Twin Cities Research Center[20].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Denver Research Center[21].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Salt Lake City Research Center[22].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Reno Research Center[23].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Rolla Research Center[24].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Tucson Mining Research Center[25].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Tuscaloosa Research Center[26].
- United States Bureau of Mines's child organization or unit is recorded as Alaska Field Operations Center[27].
Body
Founding
+1910-01-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of United States Bureau of Mines[28].
Operations
United States Bureau of Mines's headquarters location is recorded as Washington, D.C.[8]. Parent organizations include United States Department of the Interior[29] and United States Department of Commerce[30]. Subsidiaries include NIOSH Pittsburgh Mining Research Division[16], a division[31], founded in 1910[32]; NIOSH Spokane Mining Research Division[17], a division[33], founded in 1951[34]; Albany Research Center[18], a research institute[35], in United States[36]; Bureau of Mines Washington Office[19], a division[37]; Twin Cities Research Center[20], a division[38]; and Denver Research Center[21], a division[39].
Industry
Fields of work include mining[3], an economic activity[40] and mining safety[4].
Dissolution
United States Bureau of Mines was dissolved in +1996-00-00T00:00:00Z[41].
Why It Matters
United States Bureau of Mines ranks in the top 6% of government_agency entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (30 views/month).[2]