$1,288.2 $1183.6 —8.1 
 8,558.0 8,314.0 —2.9 
 $626.0 $667.0 +6.5 
 $282.0 $279.0 —1.1 
 $225.0 $241.0 +7.1 
 $18.0 $18.0_________ 
 $525.0 $538.0 +2.5 
 $274.0 $284.0 +3.6 
 4,465.0 4,536.0 +1.6 
 1,646.4 1,686.4 +2.4 
 0.3 1.2 +400.0 
 45.1 47.8 +6.0 
 1,601.0 1,637.4 +2.3 
 93.8 90.2 —3.8 
 1,507.2 1,547.2 +2.7 
Total                                  
Nonmanufacturing do.. - - 
Other2 do...... 
 139.9 +1.2 
 204.8 +1.5 
 340.0 344.7 +1.4 
 945.3 984.0 +4.1 
 221.9 218.6 —1.5 
1966: 
 Coal 12,579 191 2,400 19,138 30 
 Metal 333 268 89 714 
 Nonmetal 651 262 171 1,362 
 Sana and gravel 711 257 183 1,637 
 Stone 4,000 273 1,091 9,030 
 923 49.80 11,752 
 30 42.01 1,978 
 45 33.04 924 
 29 17.71 351 
 175 19.38 721 
 P Preliminary.' Data may not add to totals shown because of independent
rounding,812 
MINERALS YEARBOOK, 1967 
 
 
Table 3.—indicators of Virginia business activity 
 1966 1967~ Change, 
   (percent) 
 
Personal income: 
 Total millions__ $11,641.0 $12,592.0 +8.2 
 Per capita $2,605.0 $2,776.0 +6.6 
Construction activity: 
 Building permits millions  $300.5 $322.0 +7.2 
Construction contracts:' 
 Nonresidential buildings do_ - -  $422.4 $446.4 + 5.7 
 Residential buildings do - -  $525.9 $498.5 —5.2 
 Nonbuilding construction do.. - -  $339.9 $238.7 —29.8 
 Total do.~. 
Portland cement shipments to and within Virginia 
thousand 376-pound barrels - 
Total value attributable to forest resources millions_ - 
Cash receipts from farm marketings: 
   Livestock and products millions - 
   Crops do.~ 
   Government payments do~ -- 
     Total do. - -- 
Mineral production millions_~ 
Population thousands... 
   Civilian work force do - - - 
   Workers on strike do - - - 
   Unemploynent do~..... 
   Total employment do - - - 
      Agriculture do.._ 
      Nonagriculture do.. - - - 
      Manufacturing: 
          Durable goods do_ - - - 138.3 
          Nondurable goods do..... 201.7 
P Preliminary. 
 ' F. W. Dodge Division, McGraw-Hill Information Systems Company. 
 2 Includes self-employed, unpaid family workers and domestics, and Federal
Government workers in the Virginia portion of Washington, D.C., metropolitan
area. 
 
 Source: U.S. Department of Commerce; Bureau of Mines; U.S. Department of
Agriculture; Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond; U.S. Department of Labor,
Virginia Department of Agriculture; Virginia Employment Commission, and Virginia
Division of Forestry. 
 
 
 
 
Table 4.—Employment and injury experience in the mineral industries

 
Year and industry 
Average Man- Man- Number of Injury rates per 
 men Days days hours injuries million man-hours 
working active worked worked 
 daily (thou- (thou- Fatal Non-  Fre- Severity 
  sands) sands)  fatal quency 
 
 
 
 
 Total 18,274 215 3,934 31,881 30 1,202 - 38.64 7,361 
 
1967: P 
 Coal 14,090 191 2,691 21,901 28 986 46.30 9,877 
 Metal 335 267 90 718  32 44.58 599 
 Nonmetal 700 263 184 1,474  39 26.46 491 
 Sand and gravel 605 239 145 1,358  34 25.03 373 
 Stone 3,715 266 989 8,222 4 168 20.92 4,044 
 Total' 19,445 211 4,098 33,673 32 1,259 38.34 7,461