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Vertical Drop – the Challenge of Transporting Explosives UndergroundBy Ayman Tawadrous, Hendrik Botha, Simon St J Tose
The early miners and their mules always had the challenge of transporting unstable dynamite underground. The modern pumpable explosives, whilst far safer, still present a major logistics challenge for
Jan 21, 2025
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Journal: Haz Mat 101, PART 2 – Hazardous Material Placarding for Highway Transportation in Commerce of Explosives, Oxidizers, and Combustible LiquidsBy Tom Snyder, John Brulia
"The U. S. commercial explosives industry annually transports thousands of tons of hazardous materials (HM) in the form of explosives, oxidizers, and combustible liquids by highway in truck-tractor/tr
Jan 1, 2014
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Journal: 100 Years / A PRIMER ON EXPLOSIVES FOR COAL MINERS Bulletin 17 by Charles E. Munroe & Clarence Hall U.S. Bureau of Mines, Washington, D.C.By Robert Hopler
Of the common causes of the larger mine accidents, such as falls of roof and coal, gas and dust explosions, mine fires, and the misuse of explosives, all of which are often closely related, each must
Jan 1, 2012
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A Method for Calculating the Weight of Charge to Use in Large Hole Pre-Splitting for Cast Blasting OperationsBy J Lyall Workman, Peter N. Calder
Operations using draglines to remove the overburden above coal seams have increasingly turned to cast blasting to improve productivity and reduce costs. Many such operations also employ active highwal
Jan 1, 1991
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Explosives Camp – Insanity or Cold Calculation?By Paul Worsey, Barbara Robertson
In June 2007, Missouri Science & Technology (formally UMR) successfully held its 5th and 6th Explosives Summer Camps. The camps, which include substantial industry participation, have been an outstand
Jan 1, 2008
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Journal: 100 Years / Petroleum By Sir Beverton Redwood London: Charles Griffin & Company, Limited 1906 CopyrightBy Robert Hopler
Torpedoing Wells. – On the completion of the drilling, or when the production is found to decrease, it is usual to “torpedo” the well to increase the flow. This process was patented in 1862 by Colonel
Jan 1, 2007
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Journal: Old South Pole DemolitionBy John Horgan, Ethan Marcoux
Explosives have been used to demolish many unsafe structures around the world. However, it is unlikely any demolition job has ever involved destroying buildings already buried 40 feet (12 meters) into
Jan 1, 2015
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The Use of Electronic Detonators to Control Air BlastBy Andy Hudson, Stuart Brashear, David Lilly
Because of greatly increased timing accuracy, electronic detonator systems are a well-known and widely accepted major tool to control and reduce ground vibration. At a Southeastern quarry the authors
Jan 1, 2009
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"Journal: 100 Years / Annual Report of The Smithsonian InstitutionFor the Year 1914"By Edward P. O'Hern
The importance of the so-called explosives and the increasing extent of their use are evident from the fact that the production in the United States for the year 1910, as shown by the United States Ce
Jan 1, 2015
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Journal: 100 Years / US Department of Agriculture Farmers' BulletinBy Harry Thompson
In using explosives to blast stumps from the ground in order to prepare it for farming, it is comparatively easy to place the charge under a stump having a semitaproot or a lateral system of rooting b
Jan 1, 2015
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Close-In Shockwave Characteristics In Saturated SandBy L C. Taylor, H U. Lesiste
This paper provides a preliminary description of the properties of the output pressure (shock) wave of an end initiated, cylindrical charge of low height to diameter ratio in saturated sand. The prope
Jan 1, 2013
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Numerical investigation of impact of misfires and out-of-sequence delays on fragmentation and gravity flow in SLCBy C. Yi, D. Johansson, C. San Miguel, M. Wimmer
Sublevel caving (SLC) is a mass mining method based upon the utilization of gravity flow of blasted ore and caved waste rock. Production blasting has significant impact on the efficiency and productiv
Jan 1, 2024
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Firing Reliability of Electronic DetonatorsElectronic detonators are receiving increasing acceptance in the blasting industry. Electronic detonators offer several distinctive features over electric and non-el (shock tube) detonators including
Jan 1, 2010
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Comparison of Micro-Inch In-Plane and Out-of-Plane Resoponse of Cracks to Blast Vibration and WeatherBy Jeffrey Meissner, Mike Waldron, Charles Dowding
Most studies of crack response have focused on opening and closing of a crack in the plane of the wall in which the crack occurs. Crack movement also occurs perpendicular or normal to the plane of the
Jan 1, 2010
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BURST BLASTING: Solution to a Particular Blasting ProblemBy Wilfrid Comeau
Vibrograms, which last significantly longer than the actual blast (say 10 to 15 cycles or more), may be signalling an elastic response, which is not uniquely blast related. For example, geophones moun
Jan 1, 2007
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Thiokol's Accublast Detonator: Precision Benefits the Industry can JustifyBy W B. Gregg
"A review, update, and expansion of Thiokol’s presentation at BAl’s Fiih High Tech Seminar titled ‘ADetonator - An Era of Precision in All-Electronic Detonators” is provided herein (and should be cons
Jan 1, 1995
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A Retrospective Examination of the Evolution of Electronic DetonatorsBy Campbell Robertson
The evolution of electronic detonators in commercial mining, construction and demolition has been a transformative journey, characterized by technological innovation, enhanced safety measures and impr
Jan 21, 2025
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Dig Instrument By BlastingBy Jikai Rong Changai Liu
The dig instrument by blasting is a,new product we developed(See Fig. 1) It is an apparatus to dig hole at the ground. It is composed of combustor A, combustor B, charge pipe and shock head. Work char
Jan 1, 1998
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Blasting and Excavating on Precarious Rock SlopesThere is an intuitive tendency to equate rock strength with rock stability, yet the two must be evaluated separately. A slope in strong hard rock is not necessarily stable, nor is a slope in weathered
Jan 1, 1996
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Evaluation of Safety Against Lightning in MBSBy Koichi Kurokawa, Takeo Ueda, Masahi Nakano, Yoji Tasaki
A lightning strike generates several 10kA and several billion volts, and earth currents generated by lightning is dangerous to some underground and all surface blasting operations. In order to evaluat
Jan 1, 1988