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Blast Site Security - International Society of Explosive Engineers 29th Annual Conference Safety Workshop February 5, 2003 Nashville, TennesseeBy Unknown
Blast Site Security Involves: * Clearing the area * Controlling Access * Warning Signals
Jan 1, 2003
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Experimental and Computational Investigation of the Fundamental Mechanisms of Cratering (c03a8e57-961a-42b6-9348-3dd891fa944e)By B Brown, P J. Hommert, B J. Thorne
"Early attempts at estimation of stress wave damage in blasting by use of finite element analysis met with limited success due to numerical instabilities that prevented calculations from being carried
Jan 1, 1990
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Evaluating the Fragmentation Data from Copper and Gold MinesBy Sedat Esen
"This paper presents a critical review of the fragmentation data obtained from some large open pit copper and gold mines. Database ncludes 35 mines with Uniaxial Compressive Strength values ranging fr
Jan 1, 2017
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Reaction Rate Law for Emulsion Explosives as a Function of Cell and Microballoon SizeBy Pharis E. Williams
The ability to predict the performance of an explosive relies upon having a Reaction Rate Law and knowing its functional dependence upon various parameters of the explosive. In particular, emulsion ex
Jan 1, 1995
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Mine To Mill Process Integration And Optimisation – Benefits And ChallengesBy Walter Valery, Sarma Kanchibotla
Due to the global financial crisis, the world economy has turned upside down and most major economies in the world are facing severe recession for the past one and half year. During this period most c
Jan 1, 2010
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Seismic Surveying, Instrumentation and ApplicationsBy Bruce B. Redpath, Doug Crice, Rob Huggins
Over the last decade, instrumentation has been developed that allows the application of seismic reflection methods to groundwater and engineering problems. At the Geological Survey of Canada, we have
Jan 1, 1991
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Blasting Overhangs Close to a Vibration Sensitive StructureBy R. Franfield
This paper describes a situation that many drilling and blasting contractors have found themselves in – a client?s fear of the use of explosives. In the summer of 2007 Blasting Services Ltd was asked
Jan 1, 2009
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The Effect of Confinement on Ground Vibration AmplitudeBy Jay Rodgers
There has been a longstanding acceptance that burden plays a major role in the magnitude of ground vibration amplitudes generated from surface blasting. Much of the data that this belief is based upon
Jan 1, 2003
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More Efficient Use of Your GPSBy Wes Bender
Considering the current interest in Global Positioning System (GPS) usage, it might be timely to look at a more efficient means of utilizing these instruments. The GPS system currently utilizes 28 sat
Jan 1, 2002
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Case Study and Hands On with the New DSL2 Electronic Initiation SystemBy Thierry Bernard, J. M. Laboz
2000 HIGH-TECH SEMINAR Blasting Technology, Instrumentation and Explosives Applications
Jan 1, 2000
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Mining Industry and US Government Cooperative Research: Lessons Learned and Benefits to the Mining IndustryBy Robert Martin, Brian W. Stump, David P. Anderson, W Scott Philips
Since 1994, various mines in the US have cooperated with research scientists at the Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories to address issues related to verification of the Comprehensi
Jan 1, 1997
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Public Relations Program on a Deep Tunnel Project in AtlantaBy Gregory B. Poole
As part of a $3.5 billion program to improve the antiquated waste water system in the city of Atlanta, the Nancy Creek Tunnel is being constructed across the northwest portion of the city. This tunnel
Jan 1, 2005
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An Analysis of Blasting Accidents in Mining OperationsBy Harry Verakis, Thomas Lobb
Over the past decade, approximately 5.1 billion pounds of explosives were used annually, on average, in the United States. Most of the explosives were used by the mining industry. The coal mining indu
Jan 1, 2003
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The Analysis of Blast Vibration Data - What is the Current State of the Art?By Randall M. Wheeler
Many of us have used a seismograph to measure peak particle velocity and frequency. But do we really understand why? Also, why do we measure particle velocity instead of displacement and/or accelerati
Jan 1, 1997
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The Historical Development of Commercial Detonators and A Review of the Methods Used to Compare Their Ability to Initiate High ExplosivesBy Robert B. Hopler
To understand any technology it is necessary that a thorough background of how we got to the present stage is necessary. To do that with the subject of initiation devices we need to begin many hundred
Jan 1, 1990
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A Model for Near and Farfield Blast Vibration Based on Multiple Seed Waveforms and Transfer FunctionsBy D. Scott Scovira, Ruilin Yang
Blast vibration in the highwall from a cast blast in open pit mines or in the hanging walls from a stope blast in underground mines is a common concern. Vibration in such cases is a typical near-field
Jan 1, 2010
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Comparison Modeling - Multiple Seeds versus Single Seed Using the Multiple Seed Waveform (MSW) Blast Vibration ModelBy Kameron Ray, Ruilin Yang
This paper compares the modeling results obtained by using a single seed waveform (SS) versus multiple seed waveforms (MS) as inputs to the Multiple Seed Waveform (MSW) blast vibration model. The fiel
Jan 1, 2013
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Dutch Harbor, Alaska Unisea Quarry – Using Near Field Vibration Measurements to Improve Blasting Results Close to StructuresBy Mike Cammack, Logan Huppert, Gustavo Azpilcueta
During the summer of 2015, Unisea Inc. sought proposals for the G1 Dock Replacement Project in Dutch Harbor, Alaska. It would be a one year project and construction was scheduled to begin in the sprin
Jan 1, 2018
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"Journal: 100 Years / Keystone Placer Testing and Mineral Prospecting Drillers Catalog No. 2Keystone Driller Company Beaver falls, Pennsylvania 1907"By Oliver Finn
Gold dredging has made such rapid strides of late and there is such a widespread interest in this branch of mining that I venture to contribute a detailed account of the way in which a Keystone drille
Jan 1, 2008
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Notes on Detonation PhysicsBy P D. Katsabanis
According to Persson(1) steady state detonation along a cylindrical charge can be regarded as a self propagating process in which the axial compressive effect of the shock front discontinuity changes
Jan 1, 1989