Manuals Combined: Navy Air Force And Army Occupational Health And Safety - Including Fall Protection And Scaffold Requirements


Book Description

Over 2,900 total pages ... Contains the following publications: 1. NAVY SAFETY AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PROGRAM MANUAL 2. NAVY SAFETY AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH (SOH) PROGRAM MANUAL FOR FORCES AFLOAT 3. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY (DON) FALL-PROTECTION GUIDE 4. Air Force Consolidated Occupational Safety Instruction 5. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers SAFETY AND HEALTH REQUIREMENTS










Popular Science


Book Description

Popular Science gives our readers the information and tools to improve their technology and their world. The core belief that Popular Science and our readers share: The future is going to be better, and science and technology are the driving forces that will help make it better.







The Army Lawyer


Book Description







Maintenance of Waterfront Facilities


Book Description

CONTENTS Introduction General --- Joint Service Responsibility --- Maintenance Standards, Policies, and Criteria --- Terminology --- Planning --- Preparation for Work --- Access to Work --- Safety Timber Structures Preservation of Wood --- Inspection --- Maintenance Concrete Structures Concrete Technology --- Causes and Types of Deterioration --- Methods of Inspection --- Repair Methods Stone Masonry Structures Introduction --- Method of Inspection --- Methods of Repair Rubble-Mound Structures Structural Components --- Causes and Types of Deterioration --- Inspection --- Methods of Repair Structures Involving Soil Soil Description --- Soil Placement --- Inspection --- Repair Steel Structures Corrosion --- Protective Coatings --- Cathodic Protection --- Substitute Materials for Steel --- Inspection --- Maintenance of Steel Structures Plastic and Elastomeric Structures Types of Materials --- Construction Techniques References Glossary Appendices Diver Inspection of Structures --- Inspection, Documentation, Maintenance, and Certification of Graving Docks Index




Anthropometry and Biomechanics


Book Description

Assessment of the physical dimensions of the human body and application of this knowledge to the design of tools, equip ment, and work are certainly among the oldest arts and sciences. It would be an easy task if all anthropometric dimensions, of all people, would follow a general rule. Thus, philosophers and artists embedded their ideas about the most aesthetic proportions into ideal schemes of perfect proportions. "Golden sections" were developed in ancient India, China, Egypt, and Greece, and more recently by Leonardo DaVinci, or Albrecht Durer. However, such canons are fictive since actual human dimensions and proportions vary greatly among individuals. The different physical appearances often have been associated with mental, physiological and behavioral characteristics of the individuals. Hypocrates (about 460-377 BC) taught that there are four temperaments (actually, body fluids) represented by four body types. The psychiatrist Ernst Kretchmer (1888-1964) proposed that three typical somatotypes (pyknic, athletic, aesthenic) could reflect human character traits. Since the 1940's, W. H. Sheldon and his coworkers devised a system of three body physiques (endo-, meso-, ectomorphic). The classification was originally qualitative, and only recently has been developed to include actual measurements.