The Odd Challenges of Backcountry Trail Blasting (1b065404-a403-4c07-96f7-7a9b8e26646e)

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Miie Shields Ed Billington
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
565 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2002

Abstract

Trail blasters for the National Park Service (NPS) live and work in remote mountain terrain throughout the western states, where any support or resupply may be sporadic and ditlicult and mountain weather affects every activity. Mechanical “aids” are the pick, shovel, rock-bar, wheelbarrow, and a Pionjar or Cobra dritl. The blaster is usually faced with an extraordinary range of work, t?om delay blasts in weathered rock using driiole depths of 18” (46cm) to as little as 4” (1 Ocm), through reducing boulders and talus fields to useable tread, blasting stumps, snags and log-jams, to the explosive disintegration and casting of animal czcasses. One day he/she might provide a 500cf (14 cu meter) anchor excavation for a suspension bridge, the next day directionally fall 60” (1.5m) diameter snags in a camp area, and the following day blast a 3-foot-wide (1 meter) tread bench across a steep bedrock slope. To be effective, the blaster must design each and every blast around desired end result, crew and public safety, maximizing effective use of limited quantities of explosive, and the minimnation of environmental effects. Since almost all drillhole blasting occurs in the weathered zone of the rock, blasting is more the art than the science of judging rock density, hardness, cohesion and prefracturing, and selecting explosives, drill and delay patterns, and loading techniques responsive to those conditions. For these reasons the NPS issues its own Blaster’s License, with a basic requirement of at least 40 hours of NPS blaster training and 3 years of supervised Blaster in-Training experience. The focus of this pre-license requirement is on safety and using explosives as a precision tool, versus just “blowing things up”.
Citation

APA: Miie Shields Ed Billington  (2002)  The Odd Challenges of Backcountry Trail Blasting (1b065404-a403-4c07-96f7-7a9b8e26646e)

MLA: Miie Shields Ed Billington The Odd Challenges of Backcountry Trail Blasting (1b065404-a403-4c07-96f7-7a9b8e26646e). International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2002.

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