Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Advancing the Environmental Acceptability, of Open Burning/Open DetonationBy K D. Sexton, T J. Tope
Manufacturers and users of energetic material (e.g., propellants, explosives, pyrotechnics (PEP)) generate unserviceable, obsolete, off-specification, damaged, and contaminated items that are characte
Jan 1, 1996
-
The Importance of Explosive Energy on Mining CostsBy John T. Day, Lex L. Udy, Mark L. Thomas
When we consider that the purpose of blasting is to fragment rock or ore so it can be subsequently handled and processed, we can see that the cost of blasting, in reality, affects all downstream steps
Jan 1, 1987
-
Designing Blasts with Uncertainty and ToleranceBy Calvin J. Konya
When blasts are designed, we normally assume the best case situation. We assume that all burdens and spacings will be properly drilled, holes will be properly loaded, initiators will fire at the nomin
Jan 1, 1990
-
Development of Low Density Explosives with Wall Control ApplicationsBy C Hunter, K Fedak, J P. Todoeschuck
"Perimeter wall control has a direct effect on the overall grade of any underground miningoperation. Mine management at INCO's Birchtree Mine in Thompson, Manitoba requiresmaximum perimeter wall contr
Jan 1, 1993
-
Optimum Drill and Blast an Everchanging TargetBy Peter G. Bellairs
The traditional concept of Optimum Drill and Blast is that it is achieved when ore is produced at the lowest unit cost and due to the complexities of most mining operations represents a band which ext
Jan 1, 1995
-
Modern Blast Engineering to Improve Mine ProfitabilityBy Josh Campbell
Modern blast engineering involves the use of modern technology to provide more efficient blasts. Through the use of improved measurement techniques more information can be obtained on many of the phys
Jan 1, 1998
-
Technical Review of Safe Blasting Design at Limited DistanceBy Agus Setiabudi
East Pit Wira II Project in South Kalimantan, Indonesia with a radius of <500 meters (1,640 ft) from residential has about 454,168 tonnes of coal reserves, with a total remaining reserves of 3,369,383
Jan 1, 2014
-
Borehole Study of Precompression Resistance in Detonators and ExplosivesBy Joseph A. Sohara, John J. Mullay, Curtis J. Keefer, Robert L. Schrepple
The desensitization of an explosive column by the action of a previous detonation (adjacent borehole, deck or detonating cord) is a vital concern to the explosives industry. Previous reports to this s
Jan 1, 1990
-
Finite Element Modeling of Blast Vibrations and Study of Vibration Control CriteriaBy Shad M. Sargand, Glenn A. Hazen, A M. M Jayasuriya
Various types of waves originate from a blast source to propagate through rock/soil media away from the blast. Input vibration to a structure depends on the soil-structure interaction which varies wit
Jan 1, 1994
-
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
-
A Summary of Fatal Accident Due to Flyrock and Lack of Blast Area Security in Surface Mining, 1989 to 1999By D. K. Ingram, G. L. Mowrey, T. R. Rehak
This paper summarizes flyrock and blast area security fatalities from 1989 to 1999 and examines the causative factors. Coal and nonmetal mining used about 43 billion pounds of explosives and blasting
Jan 1, 2002
-
Blast Rock Movement and Its Impact on Ore Grade Control at the Coeur Rochester MineBy Pierre Mousset-Jones, Jaak Daemen, Songlin Zhang, Jon Hurley
Most western United States open pit gold mine ore bodies are disseminated deposits. The mineralization is so irregular that it is difficult to visually identify the ore/waste boundary. Blast hole samp
Jan 1, 1994
-
A Review of the Federal Surface Coal Mine Blasting RegulationsBy Richard A. Dick
On August 3, 1977 the 95th Congress passed Public Law 95-87, the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977. This Act created the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSM), wh
Jan 1, 1979
-
The Influence of Primer Size on Explosive Performance (da0d94ac-a5fd-45ab-9b70-002ce6b6fb47)By Ian A. Niell, Alastair C. Torrance
A joint research programme conducted by BHP Central Research Laboratories and Du Pont Wesfarmers Pty Ltd examined the effect of the size of cast primers on the run up and steady state detonation veloc
Jan 1, 1990
-
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
-
Monitoring While Drilling Production Blastholes: Applications in Surface MiningSeveral surface coal mining operations in North America are attempting to adapt microprocessor-based monitoring equipment as well as programmable logic controllers onto rotary blasthole drills, toward
Jan 1, 1988
-
Damage Causing Potential of Different Explosives"Blasting is an inherently destructive process and inflicts damage to the immediateperiphery of an excavation, which is later manifested as ground control and dilutionproblems. Different explosives re
Jan 1, 1993
-
Open-Pit Blast Vibration PredictionBy Jaak J. K Daemen, Carol Geertson
A portion of a tailings impoundment may need to be removed with the expansion of an open-pit mine in northeastern Nevada. The tailings are saturated and consist of fine silty soil. During the removal
Jan 1, 1998
-
Controlled Blasting at the Hanging Lake TunnelsBy Gordon F. Revey
Hanging Lake Joint Venture recently excavated two conventional 42 foot diameter highway tunnels in the difficult ground conditions of Glenwood Canyon, Colorado. This paper outlines the type and succes
Jan 1, 1991
-
Selection of Powder Factor in Large Diameter Blastholes (fd85c28b-31b4-4c7a-b833-27f2a5d736a0)By Jack Eloranta
This paper documents the relationship between material handling and processing costs compared to blasting cost. The old adage, "The cheapest crushing is done in the pit", appears accurate in this case
Jan 1, 1995