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Blasting to Reduce Ore Dilution - Are You Kidding?By Brad Bulow
Blasting is an essentially violent process aimed to disrupt and loosen rock for productive excavation. Some dilution of any ore present is the inevitable result. This makes blasting a dirty word to mo
Jan 1, 2000
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Blasting a Tunnel Through Folsom DamBy Gregg A. Scott, Gordon F. Revey
"The Folsom Dam is a 340-foot-high concrete gravity dam with embankment wing dams located on the American River about 20 miles northeast of Sacramento, California. Folsom Dam is operated andmaintained
Jan 1, 1999
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Design of New On-Site Emulsion Explosives Manufacturing PlantsBy Thomas E. Brown
Commercd explosives have evolved through this century f?om dynamite through ANFO to the current lines of Water Gels and Emulsions. Water Gels and Emulsions evolved to counter the lack of water resista
Jan 1, 1998
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An Analytical Approach For Diagnosing and Solving Blasting ComplaintsBy Douglas Rudenko
Have you ever had a neighbor complain about a blast one day, but says the next day’s blast was better, even though the Peak Particle Velocity (PPV) increased? How about neighbors that complain about a
Jan 1, 2002
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Impact of fine Aluminum on ANFO ExplosivesBy O. Rielo, P. Katsabanis
Traditionally fine aluminum is not used in dry commercial explosives due to the hazard associated with aluminum dust explosions during mixing. An industrial process has been developed which enables th
Jan 1, 2009
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Blast Simulation for Dilution Control: A Preliminary Study at Omai Gold Mine, GuyanaBy Stephen H. Chung, Kevin Atherton
The main purpose behind this preliminary study was the reduction of costs while maintaining productivity. Finding a way to achieve this balance without compromising controls on safety and quality of b
Jan 1, 1998
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Blast Assessment Through Shovel Performance MonitoringBy Carl Hendricks, Malcolm Scoble
There currently exists no viable means of obtaining continuous, quantified feedback on blast efficiency. This paper describes the adaptation of a loading shovel to serve as a diagnostic tool in evalua
Jan 1, 1991
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Calibration of a Fragmentation Model for a New Mining OperationBy Cristian Rodriguez, Tom BoBo, Maria Rocha, John Kemeny
Blast fragmentation depends on many factors. First of all, it depends on the specific blast design, which includes the amount and type of explosive, the blasting pattern, the timing and sequencing, an
Jan 1, 2014
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Internships: A Bridge into the Explosives IndustryBy Richard Hosley, James Daley
Every grey haired member of the explosive’s industry has said at least once, “We have to get some younger blood into our industry, I might want to retire someday.” And many a youngster who loves to se
Jan 1, 2014
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Engineering Field Controls and Hole DeviationBy Mick Fritz, Tom Treleaven
The success of any blast is dependent on the accuracy of the blast design and field controls placed at the shot location. The procedure by which the data is collected and analyzed is paramount to acco
Jan 1, 1998
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Proposed Draft of the ISEE Seismograph Performance Specifications and General Guidelines for Seismograph Field Use (23551c26-fab0-471e-a564-2605bfe7a483)By Richard R. Brochu
At the International Society ofExplosives Engineers Annual Conference held in Nashville, Tennessee in February 1995, a Seismograph Standards Committee was established. The purpose of this wmmittee was
Jan 1, 1998
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The Development of Compact Slurry Explosive Blasting System for TunnelingBy Junya Tokita
In Japan, packaged explosives have traditionally been used as the most common explosive for tunneling. Recently, some blasting systems such as ANFO with a kettle loader and emulsion explosives with a
Jan 1, 2005
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Safety Talk - Misfires: What All Employees Need to KnowBy Robert Morgan
The mind-set that only blasters and their helpers need training in explosives can result in risk to other employees working at mine or construction sites where blasting is conducted. Misfires are not
Jan 1, 2004
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Numerical Modeling of the Circular-Cut using Particle Flow CodeBy Young-Dong Cho, Yonghun Jong, Dong-See Shim, Seokwon Jeon, Chung-In Lee
The most important operation in the tunnel blasting procedure is to create an opening in the face in order to develop more free surface in the rock mass. This operation is highly dependent on the cut
Jan 1, 2005
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Rotary Drilling--An Analysis of the Equation Drill+Drill Steel=ProductivityBy Nils Heinke, Stephen M. Collinsorth
To anyone who is responsible for the production of blast holes, who is looked to on a daily basis for drill maintenance and performance, whose bottom line may depend on the survival of the mine itself
Jan 1, 1998
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Problems in the Russian Blasting IndustryBy Boris Belenky, M M. Graevsky, R I. Semigin, A E. Frantov
"In the mining industry, most of stripping and rock fragmentation is performed by blasting. The academician N.V. Melnikov has projected that blasting methods would be used to crush 20% of soft rocks a
Jan 1, 1995
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The Development of Low Shock Energy Ammonium Nitrate Based Explosives and their ApplicationsBy Jaki Wilson, Les Armstrong, Neville T. Moxon
Low shock energy ANFO (ANFO) mixtures have been developed for use in fragmenting weak overburden materials and reducing damage.outside the blast zone in dry conditions. These mixtures can be readily p
Jan 1, 1990
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History of the Development and Use of Bulk Loaded Explosives, from Black Powder to Emulsions (4e042d52-81d4-408b-9ff9-49bce6caf7ef)By Robert B. Hopler
Emplacing explosives in the borehole by bulk methods is utilized today for about 35% of all of the explosives used in the United States. Although different from today's methods, some bulk emplacement
Jan 1, 1992
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A Digital Surface Remote Blasting SystemBy Peter Reinders, Dirk Hummel
This paper describes a newly developed Surface Remote Blasting System (SURBS) for electronic detonators, which is currently being introduced into surface blasting applications. The rationale for devel
Jan 1, 2005
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Why We Keep Blast ReportsBy Paul Kunze
For some of us, the most disagreeable part of being the blaster- in - charge is doing the required paperwork. Cost coding on time cards, drilling reports, magazine inventory logs, and blast records al
Jan 1, 2004