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Blast Simulation of Explosives Buried in Saturated SandBy B. A. Cheeseman, R. Skaggs, C. F. Yen, S. Wolf
Shallow buried explosives pose a significant threat to lightweight vehicles and their onboard personnel. To date, designers of lightweight vehicles are limited in their knowledge of what occurs during
Jan 1, 2005
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The Art of Communication and Business in the Explosives IndustryBy Joseph Meyers
Explosives techniques and technology are constantly evolving and improving, yet basic communication and business skills are not being used regularly. Many potential blasting projects never occur due t
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Cooperation in RegulationsBy John Petty, John Loviza
Single sentence describing content-- "The best ally an Explosives Engineer can have in a court of law is a regulations enforcer stating all codes and standards were met on a jobsite".
Jan 1, 1996
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Dri-Gel ExplosivesBy Mike Zimmermann
With the steady decline in the production of dynamites throughout the world, a gap appeared in the market which could only be adequately filled by rigid paper packaged explosives. To fill this need, t
Jan 1, 1998
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Journal: Safety and SecurityTalk - Have You Done A Safety Review of Your Security Changes?By Paul Downing
While safety and security have always been concerns of the U.S. explosives community, events throughout the world during the past few years have caused us to re-examine our industry’s potential vulner
Jan 1, 2006
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Blasters Training OutlineBy Melvin A. Sannes
The explosives industry is recognized as one of the most dangerous occupations in the world, yet it is rare to see actual training procedures. As our industry becomes increasingly technical, it is imp
Jan 1, 1999
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Blast Fragmentation - Measurement, Modeling, and PredictionBy Thomas L. Barkley, Steve Salli
In the past, blasters have attempted to evaluate the results of their blast designs and make corrective adjustments to improve the blasts' productivity and value to the mining operation. The methods e
Jan 1, 1997
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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
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What I Did on My Summer VacationsBy Eric R. Achelpohl
The paper follows the introduction of a college student into the explosives industry. The opportunity of experiences from classes and work at the University of Missouri-Rolla, along with summer intern
Jan 1, 1998
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Vibration Damage Near Dwellings in Overland Park, KansasBy D G. Dressler, Paul Yeager
A previously little-known facet of seismic frequency spectrum analysis is gaining significance. The frequency spectrum of seismic waves promulgated from blasting is a significant factor in causing bla
Jan 1, 1987
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Borehole Deviation Study in a Long-Hole StopeBy Paul Miller, Rene Laprade
Does a 76 mm Ø hole drilled over 45 m deep remain straight? This is the question asked by the Engineering department at Placer Dome's Dome Mine in Timmins, Ontario before they could lay out the initia
Jan 1, 1998
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Model Studies of Loading Capactiy as a Function of Fragmentation from BlastingBy Kai Nielsen
Drilling and blasting design results in a fragmentation that will have an important economic influence on all subsequent operations such as loading, transport secondary blasting and primary crushing.
Jan 1, 1987
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Utilize photography as evidenceBy Ralph King
Blasting has been completed when the lawyer calls to say that a landowner has filed a suit alleging damages to the roof of his home. Mitigation talks fail to produce an adequate resolution and the cas
Jan 1, 2008
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Safeguarding of Blast-Affected AreasBy Jerry Bennett
A recant Bureau of Mines analysis has shown that failure of blast area security systems is the mayor cause of mine blasting accidents. Accidents occur during scheduled blasting because of failure to c
Jan 1, 1984
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Effect of Geology on Burden DisplacementBy Rahim G. Haghighi, Calvin J. Konya
Fragmentation is the fundamental concern of rock blasting and it measures the effectiveness of blasting. Fragmentation is sensitive to not only the interrelationship among the design variables, but al
Jan 1, 1986
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Burden Velocity Measurement in Cast Blasting Operations at Mount Thorley Mine Using POWERWAVE Face Velocity RadarBy A T. Spathis, J J. Felice, W Klass
Cast blasting has become one of the most efficient ways to move waste rock in open cut coal mining. It is used at Mount Thorley Mine in conjunction with a dragline to move some of the overburden onto
Jan 1, 1992
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Blasting Techniques Used On The Clif Avenue Reconstruction ProjectBy Doug Hoy
The scope of the Cliff Avenue Reconstruction Project in Sioux Falls, South Dakota was to widen a two lane highway to five lanes, along with removing and reconstructing both above and below ground util
Jan 1, 1992
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Large Hole Rotary Drill Performance (c77e5de0-de67-47fa-9ab6-1a7cb81cfd58)By J Lyall Workman, Peter N. Calder
Large hole rotary drilling is one of the most common methods of producing blastholes in open pit mining. Large hole drilling generally refers to diameters from 9 to 17 inch (229 to 432 mm), however a
Jan 1, 1996
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Development and Application of a 3-D Rock Blast Computer Modeling Capability Using Discrete Elements - DMCBLAST_3D*By Dale Preece, Stephen Chung, Richard Jensen
DMCBLAST_3D is a three-dimensional extension of the proven two-dimensional rock blast modeling code, DMCBLAST. DMCBLAST has been under development since 1987 and has successfully predicted the physics
Jan 1, 2001
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Mixed Results in Choke BlastingBy J Paul Tidman, Stephen H. Chung
One of the requirements in open pit gold mines is to minimise the mixing of ore and waste. Dilution can be reduced by choke blasting and control of the initiating sequencing. The authors have used the
Jan 1, 1997