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Drilling and Shooting of a Large Air Shaft at an Underground MineBy Curtis Garner
Griesemer Stone located in Springfield, Missouri has supplied aggregate in Southwest Missouri since 1946. In 1954 the decision was made to mine the formation and utilize the mined out area for warehou
Jan 1, 1991
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Fish Mortality Study During Underwater Blasting Operations in Lake Erie Off Nanticoke, OntarioBy A Lance McAnuff, Robert T. Booren
Construction of a dock facility for the Lake Erie Development Project of Stelco Steel involved underwater blasting in commercial fishing waters near Port Dover, Ontario. The most stringent environment
Jan 1, 1989
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Instrumentation and Monitoring Criteria to Determine Structural Response from BlastingBy H Y. Fang, H Sutherland, R M. Koerner
Due to the increased number of complaints by property owners to blasting related industries an apparent need for a clearer understanding of blasting-related damage is needed. We feel that direct struc
Jan 1, 1976
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Safety in the Industry: Recent Development in the Classification of Eexplosives Precursors – The Modified Vented Pipe TestBy David Kennedy, Noel Hsu, Miguel Araos
The use of bulk explosive for mining applications started in the 50’s. Since then millions of tons of that material have been transported by road. However during that time, there have been several roa
Jan 1, 2006
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The Scale of Effects in Evaluating Vibration Damage PotentialBy Lewis L. Oriard
Ground vibrations associated with blasting are generally in a higher frequency range and of shorter duration than those generated by earthquakes, and the intensity scales for earthquakes cannot be app
Jan 1, 1989
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Predicting Explosive Impulse by Means of Small Scale TestsBy D. Goodings, W. L. Fourney, Bonenberger, R., Uli Leiste
The Dynamics Effects Laboratory at the University of Maryland conducted a series of very small scale tests to measure the impulse delivered to a plate by the detonation of an explosive charge which wa
Jan 1, 2005
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Blasthole Pressure: What it Really Means And How We Should Use itBy Claude Cunningham
Blasthole pressure is the starting point for many blast design calculations, but the way in which it is usually derived, from measured detonation velocity, indicates that more thought is needed as to
Jan 1, 2006
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Study of Blast Over-pressure from Intentional MEC Detonations Using Double Sandbag MitigationBy Daniel Haines, Benjamin Konshak, Michelle Crull
American Technologies Incorporated Group (ATI) is the prime contractor with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Huntsville Center (CEHNC) in the Honolulu District for the removal of munitions and explosives
Jan 1, 2008
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Fracture Control BlastingFracture Control Blasting is an alternative to pre- and post-splitting or smooth wall blasting. It was developed at the University of Maryland as an attempt to overcome some of the disadvantages that
Jan 1, 1984
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The Desensitization and Malfunction of Coal-Mine ExplosivesBy Michael S. Wieland
Underground coal-mine explosives (permissibles) can be substantially degraded by the underground stress waves from the explosion of neighboring borehole charges. This cross-borehole interaction genera
Jan 1, 1987
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Numerical Modeling of the Effect of High Stresses on Blast Induced DamageBy A. S. Tawadrous
The stress field around a detonating charge in a borehole was calculated using AUTODYN for a variety of in-situ stress conditions. Calculations were conducted for zero in-situ stress, hydrostatic cond
Jan 1, 2007
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Studies on Bulk Explosives – A case studyBy B. M. P. Pingua & Md. Nabiullah
About 60 to 70 percent of bulk explosives are used in Indian coalmines to achieve coal production for power generation. Coal India Limited (CIL) is the major coal producing company in India. The avera
Jan 1, 2008
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An Examination of Mine Blasting Accidents Over a Quarter of a CenturyBy H. C. Verakis
This paper summarizes blasting accident data for over a quarter of a century (1978-2004) for all types of surface and underground mining operations in the United States. Although many billions of poun
Jan 1, 2006
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How the Blasthole Burden, Spacing, and Length Affect Rock BreakageBy Norman S. Smith, Richard L. Ash
Relationships between the three design factors of borehole burden, spacing, and length that control rock breakage were examined by means of reduced-scale bench blasts in dolomite. A set of three indic
Jan 1, 1977
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Development of the Wireless Initiating System Using Microwave PowerBy Masanobu Morita, Koichi Kurokana, Kenji Hashimoto, Yoji Tasaki, Yukio Iida
"It has been the long desire of blasting engineer to realize the automatization of tunnelblasting to improve the safety and efficiency. As for bore hole drilling, the automatizationhas been achieved b
Jan 1, 1993
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Attenuation of Blasting Vibrations in South Florida, Part IIBy Greg Mclellan, Mark Johnson, John Pepper
In this paper, the measured vibrations are plotted in terms of the individual PPV components versus Scaled Distance (SD) on logarithmic scales. The maximum PPV is pIotted on a separate graph and equat
Jan 1, 2001
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Discrete Element Modeling of Rock Blasting in Benches, with Joints and Bedding Planes - Initial Development (Geomechanics Department, 6117 Sandia National Laboratories)By Dale S. Preece
A Discrete element computer program named DMC (Distinct Motion Code) has been developed for modeling rock blasting. This program employs explicit time integration and uses spherical or cylindrical ele
Jan 1, 1995
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Reduction of Air Blast and FlyrockBy Don Rapp, Rufus Flinchum
Air blast and flyrock are two of the most critical concerns facing the blaster of today. This paper will provide the blaster with proven procedures for recognizing open face and bench surface problems
Jan 1, 1993
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Laboratory Study on Prevention Method of Detonation Failure Caused by Channel EffectBy Fumihiko Sumiya, Kunihisa Katsuyama, Yuji Ogata, Yukio Kato, Yuji Wada, Yoshikazu Hirosaki
Smooth blasting technique is widely applied for tunneling road or railway construction in Japan. However, smooth blasting technique often causes problem related to detonation failure in explosive colu
Jan 1, 2003
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Analysis of Recent Mine Blasting AccidentsBy Larry R. Fletcher
The Bureau of Mines obtained blasting accident data from the Mine Safety ant Health Administration (MSHA), U. S. Department of Labor. These data were analyzed to determine the most frequent causes of
Jan 1, 1983