IC 7492 Hazards of Black Blasting Powder in Underground Coal Mining

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
D. Harrington R. G. Warncke
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
32
File Size:
2053 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1949

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION The use of black blasting powder as an explosive in coal mines has long been recognized as hazardous and has been responsible for many of the worst disasters in American coal mines. One of the most pressing of the numerous problems confronting the Bureau of Mines, upon its creation in 1910 was to determine methods that would lessen the hazards created by the use of explosives in coal mines. The Bureau continued the study begun by the Technologic Branch of the Geological Survey as to the nature of explosives and made numerous tests to determine types of explosives suitable for blasting in coal mines. The Bureau has tested and approved hundreds of types of explosives and has disseminated information on methods and conditions for use underground to make them permissible as to safety. The Bureau of Mines has encouraged the use of permissible explosives for coal-mine blasting, and its experts both in the laboratory and in the field believe that the use of black blasting powder in any form (granular or pellet) is hazardous in any underground coal mine. Despite the information published at various times and innumerous ways and the general knowledge of the hazards that the use of black blasting powder in any form creates in the blasting of coal, the coal mines in the United States, during 1947 used approximately 34 million pounds of black blasting powder (granular or pellet), or approximately 11.8 percent of the total quantity of explosives used by the coal-mining industry.Many coal mines of the United States, for various and sundry reasons, probably will continue the use of black blasting powder, and this circular has been written for the benefit of such users, not that any suggested method or methods will make the use of this explosive safe, but it has been found that methods and conditions of use of black blasting powder can be improved so as to lessen, though not eliminate, the hazards created by its use."
Citation

APA: D. Harrington R. G. Warncke  (1949)  IC 7492 Hazards of Black Blasting Powder in Underground Coal Mining

MLA: D. Harrington R. G. Warncke IC 7492 Hazards of Black Blasting Powder in Underground Coal Mining. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.

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