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Development of Light ANFOBy Yasunori Kosaka, Junya Tokita, Aramaki Shosaku, Inoue Junji
Light ANFO that satisfies blasters and customers who want to reduce the amount of explosive consumption without changing blasting effects and designs and passes Cap sensitivity test regulated by law.
Jan 1, 2002
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Design and Testing of Bubble Curtain at Whirl Bay, BCBy 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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Dilution Control While Maximizing Fragmentation in Gold Mines with the Use of Tracking MicrochipsBy David Flores, Benjamin Cebrian
Gold mining require high levels of dilution control due the high value of ore. These types of operations employ short benches, which are suitable for ore control, lower displacement and more represent
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Electronic Blast Initiation - A Practical Users GuideBy John Watson
New Technologies, New Challenges and New Opportunities For quite some time now, numerous explosive manufacturers have spent untold man-hours and millions of dollars trying to develop a blast initiatio
Jan 1, 2003
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A Preliminary Study into the Relationship between Air Overpressure and Face Velocity in quarry BlastingBy W. J. Birch, R. Farnfield, L. Bermingham
Whilst a significant body of research has been carried into air overpressure levels that arise as a result of the use of explosives, few published studies have actually tried to relate the movement of
Jan 1, 2008
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Blast Designs and Diagnostics Using Portable, Solid State, High-Speed Videography SystemsBy Bruce Vandenberg, R. Frank Chiappetta, John Foley
Recent advances in solid-state, field portable, fast framing compact video camera systems and PC based frame capture hardware now allow blast imaging up to 1000 frames per second. Up to 4.1 seconds of
Jan 1, 2000
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Predicting Blast Vibrations More Conveniently than with the USBM MethodBy R. F. Favreau, Patrice Favreau
"A blast with explosives creates vibration waves in the zone around the blast.The prediction of the intensity of vibrations is important because people in the cinity demand that the vibrations do not
Jan 1, 2015
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Back to the Basics; Nonelectric Initiation Shock Tube Systems, Part 2: General ApplicationsBy Larry Schneider
I n the simplest application of a shock tube initiation system, the tubing acts as a “relay line” which passes a detonation signal from borehole to borehole. When the signal arrives at each borehole,
Jan 1, 1995
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Methods of Evaluating and Predicting FragmentationBy Claude Cunningham
The primary reason for blasting is to fragment rock. In production blasting, the fragment sizes produced are known to exercise an overwhelming influence over working costs: handling costs and tonnage
Jan 1, 1995
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Mining to Reduce Future Environmental LiabilitiesBy 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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Evaluation of the Methods to Determine Constituents of Bulk Commercial Explosives used in the Mining IndustryBy Kush Patel, Gary Cavanough
Mining operations consume over 2.5 Billion Australian dollars’ worth of bulk explosives annually (Richardson, 2018). Despite the large volume of product used, current practices only conduct a cup dens
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Demolition of the Milwaukee Railroad Trestle Pier, Lind, WABy William C. B. Gates
Demolition blasting next to an active railroad can be very challenging because of track safety, blasting vibrations, potential track fouling by blast debris, and short work windows on a live track. Re
Jan 1, 2016
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Deep water excavation with shaped charges: a case history in Lake Mead, Boulder City, Nevada, USABy Roberto Folchi, Hans Wallin
Lake Mead, the largest man-made reservoir in the United States, is located about 30 miles southeast of Las Vegas, Nevada. For the construction of Lake Mead third water intake, which is entirely placed
Jan 1, 2012
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Effect of Artificial Discontinuities Formed by Presplitting with Different Depths on Structural Damage RiskBy Enver Alan
This Research & Development (R&D) study was conducted in the field of applied blasting engineering in Ethiopia, within the AKH Railway Project, which was built in Girena, within the boundaries of the
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Using Internet Resources to Improve Claim ReportsBy Gregory Poole
With access to the World Wide Web, many resources are readily available for improving claim reports. With a little time spent on line, a more thorough report can be created. Claimants will accept the
Jan 1, 2006
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Seismic Refraction Surveying Techniques for Use in Blasting Design Optimization and Explosive SelectionBy John Dean Smith
"In many operations the two most overlooked aspects in the drilling and blasting process is theblast optimization and explosive selection. Often times we find a blast design that seems to work andprod
Jan 1, 1995
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Systems Integration of a Global Explosives Security System at a MultiNational Explosives Manufacturer Using Radio Frequency Identification Device (RFID) Based Technologies for Tracking and Monitoring Explosives and DetonatorsBy Thomas Zukovich, Robert Morhard, Thomas Gelormino
The ExploTrack Explosives Tracking System is a sophisticated integration platform designed to track explosive products in both fixed locations and mobile environments globally, in real-time, on a 24/7
Jan 1, 2007
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Hole Deviations in Mining Operations: Types, Sources and EffectsBy Sam Kangwa, Thomson Sinkala
Th e re are three basic types of hole deviations in long hole d ri l l i n g , n a m e l y collar i n g , alignment and tr a j e c t o r y dev i a t i o n s . In mining, the accur a cy in drilling has
Jan 1, 2004
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Blasting Claims 101: An Introduction to the Defense of ClaimsBy Joshua A. Bennett
"Lawsuits where owners allege their property has been damaged by nearby blasting routinely costblasting companies, explosives engineers, and others in the field both time and money. When ownersfeel th
Jan 1, 2016
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Compromising Technology with Field Expedience in Fragmentation EvaluationBy Jason M. Ryan
"Along with recent advances in computer technology have come cost-effective systems desiiedto evaluate fragmentation distributions through digital images of particles. In mining operations andmineral
Jan 1, 1998