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Overburden Blast Cast Designs, Economics and Case Histories
By Conny Postupack
The first principle one usually learns about blasting is that competence in this field is best gained by experience in making blasts rather than by reading a book or by listening to a lecture. The rea
Jan 1, 1991
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The SMI, New Easy-To-Use Electronic Initiation System
By Peter Duniam, Stephen John Brace
2000 HIGH-TECH SEMINAR Blasting Technology, Instrumentation and Explosives Applications Orlando,Florida,USA July24-27,200O. Objectives:- After completing this session 1. Explain safety issues 2. Do si
Jan 1, 2000
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Analysis of Sympathetic Detonation in Detonating Cord
By Abigail Styer, Paul Holmgren, Josh Calnan
Detonating cord is a staple of the explosives industry, used widely in the civil and defense industries. Detonating cord is a thin, flexible plastic tube filled with pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN
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Non-Electric Shock Tube Initiation Systems Applications and Hookups
By John Watson, Tom Treleaven
This guide presents nur-nerous patterns that provide 8 millisecond separations between initiated charges. The guide is tabulated in seven sections to provide Quick reference by number of decks or bunc
Jan 1, 1995
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Portable, Multi-Channel and Continuous Velocity of Detonation Recorders (122b6f71-61a6-4f23-afba-c5878df1df8c)
By Jackson R. Pressley, Bruce Vandenberg
The knowledge of how and when your explosives go off can help you make intelligent decisions regarding future application of explosives thus removing some of the black magic associated with blasting.
Jan 1, 1992
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Blast Designs and Controls in Steeply Dipping Coal Seams
By Ricardo Gaviria, Vincinte Acosta
There are major blast design and field procedures differences between conventional blasting in horizontally bedded coal seams and blasting underneath coal seams in a multi seam deposit with seam incli
Jan 1, 1995
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Sequence of Events During a Blast
By Patrice Favreau, R. F. Ph. D. Professor Emeritus Favreau
After Nobel invented dynamite, blasts were carried out by trial and error, without the use of equations based on the fundamental principles of Chemistry and Physics, although everyone accepted that sh
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Portable Continuous Velocity of Detonation Systems
By Jackson R. Pressley, M L. Hopkins, R E. Danell, N T. Moxon, Andrew Bowman
Efficient and cost effective blasting is achieved by closely matching the explosive energy to the strength of the material in which it is being used. Although there are many empirical relationships wi
Jan 1, 1991
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Blasting 1 Million Tons, 205 Meters from a Town
By Thierry Bernard, Guy Gagnon
Blasting at very close proximity to urban areas is typically a situation where both local communities and mining stakeholders get nervous. The context becomes logically even more tensed when the blast
Jan 1, 2014
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Journal: 100 Years / Scientific American New York December 2, 1911 The First National Mine Safety Demonstration Study Of A Real Mine Explosion By Charles L. Wright, Fuel Engineer, Bureau Of Mines
By Robert Hopler
THE work that is being done by the Government to reduce the dangers of mining was brought out strikingly in the First National Mine-Safety Demonstration which occurred at Pittsburgh, Pa., on October 3
Jan 1, 2012
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Rock Fragmentation by Explosives: Myths and Realities
By Wilfrid Comeau
While researching for a theme lecture (Comeau, 1993l) on: 'The Mechanics and Physics Explosives', the author of Energy Transfer in Rock Fragmentaion by was confronted with many conflicting concepts re
Jan 1, 1995
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Mining to Reduce Future Environmental Liabilities
By Mark A. Williams
"This paper was originally intended to be a presentation of a case study of two surface bituminouscoal mines in the southern Appalachian coal fields located within five miles of each other. These mine
Jan 1, 1994
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Blastcad 3D - Three Dimensional Underground Blast Design Software
By Patrice Favreau
In 1990 the Noranda Technology Centre commenced a project to develop an interactive three-dimensional blast design system using a commerical computer-aided drafting and design package (CADD). The obje
Jan 1, 1992
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The Effect of Confinement on Ground Vibration Amplitude
By 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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Security and Control (476c288e-1831-4c21-a747-ee41961667e9)
By Jim Mikelait
Overview ?? Why do we need security? ?? Needs assessment ?? Elements to any security system ?? Protect, Detect, Alert, esponse ?? Electronic Security System Criteria ?? Advantages and Limitations of
Jan 1, 2006
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A Protocol to Reduce the Risk of Dealing with Misfires
By Rob Farnfield, William Birch, Douglas A. Anderson
In the blasting industry, even to the most safety conscious shotfirer, misfires are a constant source of concern. In the United Kingdom, there are two types of misfire, as classified by the Health & S
Jan 1, 2016
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Computer and Centrifuge Modeling of Decoupled Explosions in Civilian Tunnels
By Neil T. Davie, Thomas K. Blanchat, Thomas C. Togami, Joe R. Weatherby, Dale S. Preece, Robert A. Benham, James J. Calderone
"Geotechnical structures ,such as underground bunkers, tunnels, and building foundations aresubjected to stress fields produced by..the gravity load on the structure and/or any overlyingstrata. These
Jan 1, 1998
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Influence of Distance in the Effective Use of Electronic Detonators to Control Blast Induced Ground Vibrations
By W. J. Birch, R. Farnfield
The use of electronic detonators to control blast vibrations has been previously established by many authors. This is performed by determining the optimum delay period between the blast holes for a pa
Jan 1, 2009
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Design and Testing of Bubble Curtain at Whirl Bay, BC
By Alastair Grogan
In October of 2002, the author was retained by Public Works and Government Services Canada, on behalf of the Department of National Defense, to design, construct and test the effectiveness of a bubble
Jan 1, 2005
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Journal: Big Sky and Beyond Explosives, Avalanches and Regulations
By Mike Boissonneault
It was three years ago when the “storm of the century” had taken a firm grip over the Pacific West Coast and inland areas. At the Big Sky ski resort in Montana on Christmas morning two ski patrollers
Jan 1, 2001