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Monitoring and Prediction of Blast Vibrations : A Case Study
By D Vidyarthi
Blasting is the most important activity in the mining industry, the world over. It is a well known fact that only part of the explosive energy gets utilized in causing the actual rock fragmentation. T
Jan 1, 2007
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Blast Assessment Through Shovel Performance Monitoring
By Carl Hendricks, Malcolm Scoble
There currently exists no viable means of obtaining continuous, quantified feedback on blast efficiency. This paper describes the adaptation of a loading shovel to serve as a diagnostic tool in evalua
Jan 1, 1991
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Influence of shock wave propagating in case on the detonation characteristics
By Fumihiko Sumiya, Hideki Hamashima, Shigeru Itoh, Shinya Tanaka
The detonation characteristics of non-ideal explosives, especially the emulsion explosives, are critically affected by the confinement of case. In this study, we focused the shock wave propagating in
Jan 1, 2007
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Current Blasting Practices for Open Pit Gold Operations in Nevada
By Ed Coulter
Nevada has a population of 1.2 million people of which only 21% or 312,rIXl are native born Nevadans. he population between 1980-1990 grew a record of 389%. and ls the fastest growing state in the uni
Jan 1, 1991
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Underground Applications Using the New EZDrifter Dual Delay Detonator System
By Pierre L. Labelle
Non electric Dual Delay initiators have revolutionized many aspects of underground mining. The units are used in all types of underground blasting operations. Some operations, due to the complexity an
Jan 1, 1994
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Microphone Height Effects on Blast-Induces Air Overpressure
By Randall M. Wheeler, Kenneth K. Eltschlager
Blasting Seismographs use microphones to measure air overpressure from blasting. The microphone height above the ground has been the object of some controversy. The current ISEE “Field Practice Guidel
Jan 1, 2005
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Understanding the “Orange Smoke” Problem in Cast Blasting
By Charles Barnhart
This paper is a discussion of the causes of deflagration in cast blasting and a description of a project intended to demonstrate how changes in six critical parameters contribute to the deflagration c
Jan 1, 2003
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Design of New On-Site Emulsion Explosives Manufacturing Plants
By Thomas E. Brown
Commercd explosives have evolved through this century f?om dynamite through ANFO to the current lines of Water Gels and Emulsions. Water Gels and Emulsions evolved to counter the lack of water resista
Jan 1, 1998
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Balancing Labor and Capital: A Global View
By David Reddick
The mining industry is in the midst of dramatic change. Mining activities are moving from industrialized first world countries (Canada, Australia, and the United States) to the third world. This shift
Jan 1, 1997
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Natural Causes vs. Blasting Damage (0f5bd837-c817-4297-aa85-2fe7a4624b9b)
By Earl C. Hutchison, Wade C. Hutchison
T 0 effectively evaluate property damage that is claimed to have been caused by blasting activities and in order to lay the proper foundation to build the best legal defense, identification of the act
Jan 1, 1995
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New and Improved ISO-Seismic 3D Analysis System for Mapping Ground Vibration Patters Around a Blast
By D T. Froedge
At the 1990 Symposium of the Society of Explosives Engineering, D.T. Froedge, President of GeoSonics Inc., presented a paper entitled "Differential Topographic Vibration Isomapping", which detailed th
Jan 1, 1992
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Choosing the Correct Bulk Loading Equipment Can Help Optimize Your Blasting Program
By R Tom Watts
The blasting industry has changed more in the last five years than in any period to date. The equipment utilized to load boreholes has changed in response to more precise blasting products and program
Jan 1, 2000
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The Non-Deal Detonation
By Eric Dussell
Commercial or industrial explosives are mechanically-mixed, fuel-oxidizer composites which exhibit varying degrees of non-ideal behavior. Non-ideality results from a relatively slow and state-insensit
Jan 1, 1997
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History of the Development and Use of Bulk Loaded Explosives, from Black Powder to Emulsions (4e042d52-81d4-408b-9ff9-49bce6caf7ef)
By Robert B. Hopler
Emplacing explosives in the borehole by bulk methods is utilized today for about 35% of all of the explosives used in the United States. Although different from today's methods, some bulk emplacement
Jan 1, 1992
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A Tiered Approach to Mitigating the Environmental Effects of Underwater Blasting
By Thomas M. Keevin, Gregory L. Hempen
"Natural resource agencies, under various regulatory authorities, are challenged with permitting underwater explosive use while at the same time protecting aquatic resources. Deciding on whether or no
Jan 1, 1995
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The High Explosives Industry in the United States: The First 20 Years - 18654 885
By Robert B. Hopler
The history of the first twenty years of the high explosives industry in the United States begins as an illustration of the free enterprise system at its best and ends with the industry virtually take
Jan 1, 1994
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New State-of-the-Art Instrumentation Systems for Blast Monitoring in Underground and Surface Operations
By Tony A. Rorke, Joe R. Brinkmann
The application of instrumentation to better understand and improve production blasting is one of the most fruitful areas of explosives and blasting research. The majority of instrumented studies of p
Jan 1, 1991
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Simple Models for Gas Flow and Burden Movement During Blasting
By Italo Onederra, Jason Furtney, Ewan Sellers
The detonation reactions occurring during rock blasting result in high pressure gas phase products from the condensed explosives typically used in mining applications. After detonation and the initial
Jan 1, 2012
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National Research Council Committee on Marking, Rendering Inert, and Licensing of Explosive Materials
By Robert B. Hopler
Explosives, originally used only in fireworks and warfare, became legitimate contributors to human progress when miners in Eastern Europe began using them to break rock in the early 1600%. Since that
Jan 1, 1997
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Economics of Buffer Blasting in Surface Mineral Mines-Minimizing Ore Waste and Dilution
By Dale S. Preece, J Paul Tidman, Stephen H. Chung
A discrete element computer program named DMC-BLAST (Distinct Motion code) has been under development since. 1987 for modeling rock blasting (Preece & Taylor, 1989). This program employs explicit time
Jan 1, 1998