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Application of blast control plugs and their positive results on airblast and surface fragmentationBy Lynn Long
We have seen many new developments in the explosive and blasting accessory category, but one of the most useful items is the blast control plug. Blast control plugs are cone shaped units that are plac
Jan 1, 1996
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Detection of the Initiation Sequence Using EMF at the Yanacocha Mine in Perú.By Romel B. Villanueva
At the Yanacocha gold mine, in the Andes of northern Perú, the first instrumental tests were carried out in October 2019 to detect the initiation sequence of a production blast by detecting the EMF si
Jan 21, 2025
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Vibration Workshop Abstract Canadian Vibration and Airblast RegulationsBy Paul McAnuff, Alastair Grogan
In Canada, the only vibration regulations which apply across the entire country are intended to protect fish spawning areas. The Provinces and Territories regulate mines and quarries, and are responsi
Jan 1, 2005
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Public Relations for Drilling and Blasting ProjectsBy Mark Fritzen
Drilling and blasting near residential or business inhabited areas may expose people to blast induced vibration. Many of these people have never been exposed to blast vibration and airblast which can
Jan 1, 2000
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Blast Design at Pinson MineBy Melvin A. Sannes
The Pinson Mine has several different rock formations, running throughout the pits. The main types of material found are Alluvium, Shale and Limestone. In some instances, all three can be found within
Jan 1, 1998
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Pioneering with Medium Diameter LiftersBy Luke Thornton, Jack Janssen
An unconventional drill pattern is used in an aggregate quarry to reduce pioneering costs. The site is the Iron Mountain Quarry, Granite Falls, WA., an aggregate quarry with an annual production of in
Jan 1, 1997
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Geologic Considerations in BlastingBy Michael Laing
"Geology plays a critical role in many aspects of blasting, from fragmentation to wall control. One often overlooked component of blasting concerns blast results due to the effect of geologic features
Jan 1, 2016
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Solving Blasting Safety Hazards with Advanced TechnologyBy Ronald W. Roberts
For years, blasters have experienced near-misses, injuries, and yes, even fatalities as a result of the dangerous nature of our business. Yet, some blasters continue to portray the immortal attitude:
Jan 1, 1996
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Azimuthal Variation of Ratiation of Seismic Energy from Cast BlastsBy Robert Martin, Brian W. Stump
As part of a series of seismic experiments designed to improve the understanding of the impact of mining blasts on verifying a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, a sixteen station network of three-compone
Jan 1, 1997
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Death of a Coal ShovelBy Roger G. Sprague
With the passing of time, changing marketplaces and years of hard service, coupled with new machines, increased productivity, rapidly improving technology, equipment which used to be the latest in mod
Jan 1, 1998
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Gulf Slurry Products and Their UsesBy Charles B. Ingram, Neil E. Gehrig
The development of water gel explosive products has been the single most important development in explosive research and development since the invention of nitroglycerine and dyne-mite many years ago.
Jan 1, 1977
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More than Scratching the Surface – Capturing Blast hole Features to Improve QA/QC and Compliance to DesignBy Paul Klaric, Nicholas Bodley
Every blasting engineer or professional can attest to the age-old conundrum of obtaining accurate hole information on a large scale prior to loading explosive charges in a blast hole. Even though the
Feb 6, 2023
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Make a Good ImpressionBy Sandra Penttinen
There are several ways to get a positive reaction from abutters to blasting projects. When you need to enter structures to conduct a blast-blast inspection, the impression you make on the structure ow
Jan 1, 2005
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Blasting 1.5 T of Dynamite, Hang up on a Cliff, 125 m Above a Hydroelectric Power PlantBy Thierry Bernard, Philippe Dozohne
May 13th, in the back country of Nice @arice) collapsed a complete piece of mountain, cutting the RN 2085 and destroying a part of Valabfre’s viaduct. The fist inspections of the site showed that mate
Jan 1, 2001
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Cutting Edge on the Northern EdgeBy Jerry Newton
The bulk explosives industry is relatively young compared to how long explosives have been in use. It's been around for about forty years, about the length of a person's career. This period of explosi
Jan 1, 1997
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Improving Quarry Production Rates by Reducing Bucket Fill TimeBy Elliott Giles
"Measuring a blast’s performance based on the bucket fill time or “diggability” has always been achallenge due to the subjectivity generally involved. The diggability of a blast is often based onopini
Jan 1, 2016
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The Use of High-Speed Motion Picture Photography in Blast Evaluation and Design (23c6f2b6-16c1-4f76-b2cd-4d87a79d67ba)By P J. Dailey, S L. Burchell, R F. Chiappetta
High-speed motion picture photography and its application to the mining, quarry, construction, and explosive industries has proven to be a valuable diagnostic tool. The techniques developed allow one
Jan 1, 1983
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Modeling Blast-Induced Damage in Open Pit Mines with Numerical ModelsBy Cristian Castro, Patricio Gomez, Jason Furtney, Augusto Lucarelli
Understanding the effect of blast-induced damage on wall stability is critical to safe and economical operation of a large open pit mine. In this paper, a numerical modeling methodology is used to inv
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Modeling Blast-Induced Damage in Open Pit Mines with Numerical ModelsBy Cristian Castro, Patricio Gomez, Jason Furtney, Augusto Lucarelli
Understanding the effect of blast-induced damage on wall stability is critical to safe and economical operation of a large open pit mine. In this paper, a numerical modeling methodology is used to inv
Feb 1, 2020
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Tigerwin - A Window PC Code for Computing Explosives Performance and Thermodynamic PropertiesBy Per-Anders Persson
This chapter deals with the concepts of shock wave8 and detonation wavea together, because a detonation wave is really a shock wave, supported by the explosive reaction that the shock wave ignites and
Jan 1, 1998