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Blast Vibration Predictions, Damage Assessment and Vibration Monitoring for a Medical Center ExpansionBy D. Lee Petersen, Travis Davidsavor
The 2003-2004 expansion of a Duluth medical center required rock blasting adjacent to the existing structures, a Mn/DOT retaining wall and other urban structures. This case history describes the metho
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: Old South Pole DemolitionBy John Horgan, Ethan Marcoux
Explosives have been used to demolish many unsafe structures around the world. However, it is unlikely any demolition job has ever involved destroying buildings already buried 40 feet (12 meters) into
Jan 1, 2015
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Journal: 100 Years / Petroleum By Sir Beverton Redwood London: Charles Griffin & Company, Limited 1906 CopyrightBy Robert Hopler
Torpedoing Wells. – On the completion of the drilling, or when the production is found to decrease, it is usual to “torpedo” the well to increase the flow. This process was patented in 1862 by Colonel
Jan 1, 2007
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Detonation of Non-Electric Initiation Systems Across an Air GapBy B. Winterberg, C. Lewis, M. Starkel, C. Johnson
Non-electric systems, specifically shock tube, have become the pyrotechnic detonator of choice over electric due to their safety regarding accidental initiation from stray radio signals. Typically, th
Jan 1, 2024
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Journal: 100 Years / US Department of Agriculture Farmers' BulletinBy Harry Thompson
In using explosives to blast stumps from the ground in order to prepare it for farming, it is comparatively easy to place the charge under a stump having a semitaproot or a lateral system of rooting b
Jan 1, 2015
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Danger Tree Blasting In BCBy Dave Weymer
Falling timber in BC has always been a hazardous job. Huge, often rotting trees and steep, rugged terrain combine to create difficult and dangerous conditions. Death and injury rates are among the hig
Jan 1, 2013
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Blasting Access Holes in Thick Sea-Ice, Mcmurdo Sound, AntarcticaBy Martin Reed, John Wright
Blasters with the United States Antarctic Program (USAP) have developed techniques for opening access holes in floating sea-ice where the use of conventional drilling equipment is impractical. The bla
Jan 1, 2001
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Journal: Vibration and Seismograph Section / Use of GPS and GPS Exchange Format Files in PennsylvaniaBy Rick Lamkie
When investigating citizen complaints about blast vibration and airblast, it is important to be able to establish the spatial relationships between blasts, blasting seismographs monitoring the events,
Jan 1, 2008
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Pneumatic Stemming of Horizontal Holes with Particulate MaterialBy Clay McNail, Paul N. Worsey, John Schillie
"This paper is the result of undergraduate student research over the period of 2 semesters at UMR, which was focussed on developing a practical way to pneumatically stem horizontal boreholes, mostcomm
Jan 1, 1999
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Drilling and Blasting OptimizationBy Jorge Flores, Benjamin Cebrian
Blast Optimization at a high altitude mine operation involves not only the selection of the right drilling designs and explosives but also the circumstances of operators working at low oxygen levels a
Jan 1, 2015
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Kanalku Falls Blasting for Fish Habitat Improvement in AlaskaBy Catherine T. Aimone-Martin, Kristen Kolden
In August of 2013 the USDA Forest Service (USFS) blasted bedrock at the base of a waterfall in Kanalku Creek within the Kootznoowoo Wilderness Area on Admiralty Island in the Tongass National Forest l
Jan 1, 2015
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Reactivity and Spontaneous DetonationBy Alastair Torrance, Italo Onederra, Do Sun Kim, Kush Patel, Gary Cavanough
Reactivity of ammonium nitrate-based explosives is associated with the presence of sulphide in the ground reacting with explosive products and in some instances causing spontaneous reactions which can
Jan 1, 2019
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Removing Booster Influences from Toxic FumesBy Michael S. Wieland
"This report investigates whether it is tractable and thereupon reasonable to remove the boosterinfluences when ranking the toxic fumes of non-cap-sensitive mining explosives. The hazard potential is
Jan 1, 1999
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Blast- Induced Structural and Crack Response of a Brick Residential Structure Near an Aggregate QuarryBy Charles Dowding, Cathrine Aimone-Martin
This article summarizes an investigation of the structural response of a brick façade home in New Mexico. The subject Ricter residence was located some 1100 to 1400 ft away from an aggregate quarry, a
Jan 1, 2005
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Six Pillars, Inventory Management & ATF Record-keepingBy Ron Ketterling
We will discuss electronic and paper record keeping, what works and what doesn’t. We’ll review record keeping in light of those five sub-committees: Audit, Awards, Constitution, Ethics and Planning. Y
Feb 1, 2020
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"Journal: 100 Years / Annual Report of The Smithsonian InstitutionFor the Year 1914"By Edward P. O'Hern
The importance of the so-called explosives and the increasing extent of their use are evident from the fact that the production in the United States for the year 1910, as shown by the United States Ce
Jan 1, 2015
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Measurement of Pressure VariancesBy Jason Baird, Philip Mulligan, Caleb Baumgart
This report details the pressure variances, measured at four pressure sensors placed equidistant from the center of an airburst explosion, as the blast pressure from a single charge expands radially.
Jan 1, 2014
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Application of the NIOSH-Modified Holmberg-Persson Approach to Perimeter Blast DesignBy Chick Kerkering, Stephen Iverson
Perimeter control blasting is common in civil construction projects but not as common in mining. A poorly designed and executed underground mine development blast design can result in unwanted wall ro
Jan 1, 2008
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New Methodology in Measuring Experimental Results of Linear Shaped Charges Using Digital SoftwareBy Kevin Phelps, Jason Baird, Philip Mulligan, Dominique Nolan
Determining the transitions from run-up to optimal cut length and optimal cut length to run down, without bias, from the penetration of a linear shaped charge (LSC) is difficult. The stresses applied
Jan 1, 2013
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Bulk Explosives Testing at the Red Dog Mine in Northwestern AlaskaBy Norman Paley, John Kells
The climate and location of the Red Dog Mine present several challenges to blasting operations. The mine is located north of 68º latitude, in an area of continuous permafrost. Ground temperatures are
Jan 1, 2004