The Charging of Slurry Explosive with the Nitro Nobel Cartridge Loader at the Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Co. Ltd., Queenstown, Tasmania

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Wilson J. R
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
9
File Size:
658 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1977

Abstract

The main mining method employed at Mt Lyell is sub-level open stoping with a typical extraction level interval of 100 m and sub-level intervals of 30 m. Currently, pillar blasts provide the major portion of broken ore and firings are in the order of 200 000 to 300 000 tonnes while future firings of 500 000 to 300 000 tonnes are planned. Improvement of blasting techniques in these mass firings has been necessary for the following reasons. 1. Extremely wet ground conditions have adversely affected ANFO performance and placed extreme pressure on the charging and priming phases. 2. As pillar blasts increase in size the problems of wet ground conditions are accentuated resulting in very slow loading of wet upholes with cartridged gelignite and unreliable charging of the remainder with ANFO. 3 Fragmentation in pillar blasts has suffered because of the above, result- ing in increased secondary breaking costs and difficulty of extraction.
Citation

APA: Wilson J. R  (1977)  The Charging of Slurry Explosive with the Nitro Nobel Cartridge Loader at the Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Co. Ltd., Queenstown, Tasmania

MLA: Wilson J. R The Charging of Slurry Explosive with the Nitro Nobel Cartridge Loader at the Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Co. Ltd., Queenstown, Tasmania. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1977.

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