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Mine Blasting Safety: A Century in ReviewBy Harry Verakis, Thomas Lobb
This paper summarizes the course of mine blasting safety, particularly in underground coal mining, in the USA for over a century of mining operations. During the late 1800's and especially in the firs
Jan 1, 2009
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Keeping Airblasts Under ControlBy Jaak J. K Daemen, Clayton R. Morlock
A study was performed to evaluate the predictability of airblast overpressures induces by production mine blasting. Thirty-seven production blasts were monitored using 3 blasting seismographs giving o
Jan 1, 1983
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Heat-Resistant Water Gel ExplosivesBy Y Omura
If dynamite is used in hot metal mines, it may be subject to decomposition, and the increase in nitroglycol vapour under the high temperatures causes bad headaches of workers. Also the explosives cont
Jan 1, 1983
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Large Hole Rotary Drill Performance (c77e5de0-de67-47fa-9ab6-1a7cb81cfd58)By J Lyall Workman, Peter N. Calder
Large hole rotary drilling is one of the most common methods of producing blastholes in open pit mining. Large hole drilling generally refers to diameters from 9 to 17 inch (229 to 432 mm), however a
Jan 1, 1996
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The Effect of Powder Factor on FragmentationThis paper examines the hypothesis that the fragment size distribution of blasted rock contains information about the changes in fragment sizes with distance from the borehole, and that this informati
Jan 1, 1997
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Wall Control Blasting at the Manassas QuarryBy J Lyall Workman, Peter N. Calder
The Manassas Quarry is a large industrial stone quarry in Northern Virginia owned and operated by Vulcan Materials Company. The quarry experienced instability in a portion of the north wall, which inc
Jan 1, 1992
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The Development and Implementation of Efficient Wall Control Blast DesignsBy John L. Floyd
One of the key factors that controls the overall profitability of surface operations is the required volume of excavated material. If the overall angle of final walls can be maximized the amount of ma
Jan 1, 1998
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Estimating Damage Caused by Rock VibrationBy Raimo Vuolio
"Over the past 30 years, the Nordic countries have developed similar practices for estimating damage caused by rock blasting vibrations. However, over the last few years the risk of damage has sometim
Jan 1, 1991
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Effect of High Temperature on Communication Among Non-Electric DetonatorsBy E. Contestabile, B von Roser
Schedule IV containers in Canada and IME- containers in the United States have made possible the transport of mixed loads. That is, using these containers for detonators, one can simultaneously transp
Jan 1, 2002
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Increasing Back Break Using High Speed Blasting TechniquesBy Terry L. Cook
RAG Coal West, Inc., Belle Ayr Mine is located in the heart of Wyoming’s rich Powder River Basin coalfield. Belle Ayr utilizes an open pit, truck/shovel operation to strip the overburden off the 70’se
Jan 1, 2004
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Insurance - Safety is the Only PolicyBy Charles D. Sutton
Safety is an important part of the everyday activity for the explosives industry. The overall accident experience has not been adverse, however, many insurance companies have eliminated coverage for e
Jan 1, 1987
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Demolition of Old Bridge Piers ByBlastingBy S. Mandal, R. Singh
The demolition of structures with explosive though most rapid, safe and efficient requires planned blast design parameters with respect to geometric and strength properties of the structure to be demo
Jan 1, 2001
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Relating Horsepower to Drilling ProductivityBy Brian Wingfield, Rick Givens, Greg Williams
Many technological advancements have been made in explosive products and applications over the last 15 years resulting in productivity and cost gains. However, the application of total energy (engine
Jan 1, 1996
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Single Round Blasting of 10 Food Diameter x 65 Foot Depth Emplacement Shaft Collars at the Mercury, Nevada Test SiteBy Tom Short, Bill Beam
Some of the weapons testing shafts at Mercury, Nevada require depths of 1000ft and diameters of 10 feet. The top 40 feet to 65 feet is drilled, blasted and excavated by Large caisson type augers in or
Jan 1, 1991
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Tunneling from an Underground Limestone Mine to the SurfaceBy John A. Huber
At an underground limestone mine in the Central United States; there were plans for the installation of a limestone processing plant. The special design and layout of the plant called for the installa
Jan 1, 1995
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A Two Component Liquid Explosive (Quadrex-L) and Its ApplicationBy Jerome S. Brower
Quadrex-L is a two component liquid explosive which was developed by J. S. Brower & Associates, Inc. to facilitate handling and shipping, and use in unique applications, while emphasizing safety. It m
Jan 1, 1975
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Perimeter Control with Tracer BlastingBlasting is a very cost effective method of rock fragmentation but its uncontrolled application often results in excessive damage to the perimeter of an excavation. Several perimeter control technique
Jan 1, 1997
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Effect of Fragmentation on Loader EfficiencyBy David Willock, S. Singh, Michael Glogger
The efficiency of the loading system in a mine depends upon the characteristics of the muck pile, the loading machine specifications and the loading practices. The focus of this paper was to look spec
Jan 1, 2001
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Nine Years of Blasting Experience with Electronic Delay DetonatorsBy Claude Cunningham
AEL has been developing electronic detonators continuously since 1986. It launched its first system for opencast mining in 1993, and now has two distinct product lines. The path has not been without g
Jan 1, 2002
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Determination of the Initiation Strength of Commercial Detonators Using an Adjustable-Sensitivity Liquid ExplosiveBy J Edmund Hay, T S. Bajpayee
The Bureau of Mines is developing a test to determine the initiating strength of commercial detonators. Various tests of "detonator strength" are in use, but many of them do not correlate well with ea
Jan 1, 1992