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Automatic Blast Design Based on Autonomous Drone
By Thierry Bernard
New technology to automatically design a blast based on autonomous drone. The process of flying a drone, calculating the 3D cloud of points, generating the critical face profiles and placing holes aut
Feb 1, 2020
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Underwater Explosions - Particle Size Effect Of Al Powder To The Energy Content Of An Emulsion Explosive
By Martti Hagfors, Jussi Saavalainen
The underwater explosions has been used as a test method for the determination energy content of explosives. The test method is suitable for all kind of explosives; homogeneous, heterogeneous, wa-ter-
Jan 1, 2010
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Blasting for Wall Control and Stability using Electronic Detonators at the Bald Mountain Mine, Nevada
By Kurt Oakes, John Williams
Placer Dome, US operates the Bald Mountain Mine. The Bald Mountain Mine is a surface operation located in remote northwestern White Pine County in east-central Nevada, approximately midway between Elk
Jan 1, 2004
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Strain and Peak Particle Velocity as Vibration Criteria: Some Thoughts
By Syed Haq, Kyle Optt, David Campo, Doug Anderson
Limitations on allowable levels of vibration from construction activities generally consider either annoyance or damage. While activities such as drilling and roller compaction primarily create annoya
Jan 1, 2004
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Carbon Monoxide Poisoning at a Swface Coal Mine . . . . A Case Study
By Thomas Kovalchuk, Kenneth Eltschlager, William Shuss
In April of 2000, two adults and their newborn infant, were poisoned by carbon monoxide in their home and received medical treatment at a Pennsylvania hospital. Carboxyhemoglobin levels were; child -
Jan 1, 2001
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Blast Damage Claims Evaluation and The Small Engineering Firm
By Mark A. Rugen
It may be difficult to imagine but small engineering companies do exist, even in relatively large cities like San Antonio. Due to the limited capital available for the purchase or use of equipment suc
Jan 1, 1983
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Blast Modeling for Facility Security Management
By Shonn K. McNeill, Joshua Micah Hoffman
Security engineering is similar to other forms of engineering – the design is guided by the loads, materials, and desired function. For facility design, the load is the threat. Facilities that are de
Jan 1, 2019
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Are You As Efficient As You Can Be? - An Underground Paper-
By Roger L. Keller
This paper examines the aspects of differing types of blasting cuts in underground headings with consideration to the reduction of number of holes and costs. At least one comparison study is related w
Jan 1, 1989
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Digitized, Integrated and Optimized Drill and Blast
By Sushil Bhandari, Amit Bhandari
In this paper, a case study is presented of a large global cement company using a cloud and mobile based platform across 17 of their mines consistently over a large number of users over a period of ov
Feb 1, 2020
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Suggestions for Successful Cut Blasting
Blasting in a development heading or breasting operations starts from a cut. The void created by the cut provides a free face for the remainder of the round. It is the most critical part of the round
Jan 1, 1995
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Coyote Blasting - An Overview
By S. S. Jenkins Jr.
While the method is seldom used anymore, coyote blasting is an historically interesting way to blast large quantities of rock. It was used extensively in the days before modern fast drills were availa
Jan 1, 2005
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Instrumentation for Blast Monitoring in Underground Mines
By Francis Otuonye
Rock fragmentation by blasting still remains the most common and cost-effective method of excavating hard rock in mining and tunneling operations. During blasting, the dynamic stresses induced by the
Jan 1, 1992
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Blast Preconditioning – A Development and Operational Challenge
By Jeff Gore, Jack Dermody, David Gribble, Brett Macaulay, Bart Sharpe, Paul Klaric, Paul Thornley, Ben DeVries
Optimal Fragmentation in Block Caving is difficult to achieve as it is generally defined by the rock mass itself and the way in which the cave is initiated. The lower portion of the cave has even less
Jan 1, 2013
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Safety in Blasting Has No Limits
By W C. Brukle
Our title for this presentation could be taken in many ways. One course would be terrifying and that would be to cite incredibly bad practices. All of our votes/efforts should be for the reverse direc
Jan 1, 1983
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Blast Desification Techniques (An Operator's Guide)
By Patrick D. McLaughlin, C Fordham
"The project outlined in the accompanying paper was to densify beach sands on the pond side ofa tailings dyke to the strength required for future dyke construction, This was to be achievedthrough the
Jan 1, 1992
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Journal: 100 Years / The Engineering And Mining Journal New York August 10, 1907 Ground Breaking In The Joplin District Q786 Holes Are Drilled With Air Drills And Squibbed Before Charging. About 1 Pound Of Dynamite Is Required Per Ton Of Rock Broken
By Doss Brittain
The term ground breaking is taken to include the process of so loosening the ground as to enable it to be readily loaded into buckets or cars and hoisted from the shaft or drift. In the Joplin distric
Jan 1, 2008
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Low-Rise Building Damage from Low-Amplitude Ground Motions
By Roger E. Scholl
Data on off-site low-rise building damage from underground nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) of the United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) [The AEC has been called the United States
Jan 1, 1976
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Utility Blasting Using Atlas's Two-Component Explosive Kinepak
By Carl E. Jones
This presentation discusses the properties of the two-component explosive, KinePak, and how it is used by the utility industry.
Jan 1, 1978
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Improving Blast Fragmentation Prediction with New Technologies for Rock Mass Characterization
By John Kemeny
There are many methods used to predict blast fragmentation, including empirical and numerical models, field trials, and experience from ongoing blasting. All of these methods require an accurate measu
Jan 1, 2004
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A New Tool for Managing Risk Associated with Commercial Explosives Operations
By Lon Santis, David Leidel, John Tatom, Meredith Hardwick
This paper describes the development and methodology of the Institute of Makers of Explosives’ Safety Analysis for Risk (IMESAFR), a risk analysis software program for commercial explosives operations
Jan 1, 2007