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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 MinesBy 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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Environmental Aspects of Blasting in the United KingdomBy T J. Wilton, K A. Broadhurst
The United Kingdom, although a relatively small island, has a wealth of mineral deposits, coal, granite, limestone, gypsum, lead, florspar, etc. Coal is a major source of energy with 71 opencast coal
Jan 1, 1981
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Comparison of Structure Response to Hard and Soft Rock BlastingBy C. T. Aimone-Martin, V. L. Rosenhaim
The response of two structures to blast-induced ground vibrations were evaluated and compared in order to quantify the impact of different blasting operations, hard rock and soft rock blasting, upon t
Jan 1, 2015
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Performance and Detonation Characteristics of BCHMX in three different plastic matricesBy Svatopluk Zeman, Zbynek Akstein, Jiri Pachman, Ahmed Elbeih, Marcela Jungova
BCHMX (cis-1,3,4,6-tetranitro-octahydroimidazo-[4,5-d]imidazole or Bicyclo-HMX) was studied as an energetic component of three different plastic explosives based on three matrices: C4 matrix, semtex10
Jan 1, 2011
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Methane-air Mixture Air-blast Approximated Using Detonating Cord in Rock Dust Dispersibility StudiesBy BruneJurgen F., Richard C. Gilmore, Matthew Schreiner, Ray Johnson
Explosive pockets of methane-air mixtures accumulate in underground coal mines and, when ignited, produce an air-blast wave that can disturb combustible coal dust on the floor, roof, and ribs. To prev
Jan 1, 2019
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Structure Responses to a Confined Opening Cut Blast, Sumterville, FLBy Jeff Senules, Oana Meins, Catherine Aimone-Martin, Scott Lanker, Brent Meins
Global wall strains from 4 to 77 micro-strains were measured at three structures adjacent to a highly-confined Florida quarry blast when PPV amplitudes ranged up to 6.05 in/s. Increasing the peak zero
Feb 1, 2020
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How the USDA Uses Explosives to Remove Beaver Dams in Unique LocationsBy Bruce R. Leland, Steven H. Smith, John D. Paulson
The USDA - Wildlife Services has been removing beaver dams with explosives for over 30 years. This paper will discuss the history of the explosives program, summarize how we've evolved, and highlight
Feb 1, 2020
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Risk Assessment Software Applied To Large Bomb Detonations Near StructuresBy Joshua Hoffman, Rob Farnfield, Catherine Johnson, Braden Lusk, Morgan Lane
IMESAFR (IME Safety Analysis for Risk) is a quantitative risk assessment software tool developed by the Institute of Makers of Explosives (IME) and A-P-T Research, Inc. It is used for managing risk in
Jan 1, 2014
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Modeling An Artificial Screen For Reducing Seismic VibrationBy Lazar Kricak, Vladislav Kecojevic, Dragan Bogunovic
In spite of many advantages explosives have, their usage may cause environmental problem such as seismic vibration. One of the solutions to this particular problem may be application of an artificial
Jan 1, 2007
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Blasting Topologies for Electronic Initiation SystemsBy D. Lansburg
Electronic detonators are increasingly being used in today’s blasting in quarries, seismic, surface and underground mines. Electronic detonators offer several distinctive features over electric and no
Jan 1, 2011
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Simulations of Full-scale Bench Blasts using FDM (Fracture Density Model)By Dale S. Preece
A new three dimensional (3D) mechanistic model of fragmentation, called the Fracture Density Model (FDM) is used to simulate full-scale bench blasts at the Bararp dimensional stone quarry in Sweden. T
Feb 1, 2020
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Evaluating Explosive Type and Water-Casing for Demolition Kicker ChargesBy Rachel L. Bauer, Catherine E. Johnson
Explosive demolition involves first, the use of cutting charges to sever a column and second, kicker charges to move it out of alignment. Dynamite is the traditional explosive used in kicker charges a
Jan 21, 2025
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All In The TimingBy Sean Paterson
The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate a method of delaying and loading a shot. Since entering the construction industry, I have learned that cover is needed on a lot of blasts. When in close hav
Jan 1, 2001
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Flyrock: A Continuing Blast Safety ThreatBy Harry Verakis
Flyrock is the second leading cause of all blasting related injuries in surface coal, metal and nonmetal mining operations. It is also a primary cause of property damage, monetary losses and “near mis
Jan 1, 2011
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Limitations of using PPV Damage Models to Predict Rock Mass DamageBy Jianping Li, Ernesto Villaescusa, Kelly Fleetwood
During blasting, stress waves propagate through a rock mass, inducing stress and strain changes. This applied deformation affects intact rock, existing discontinuities, mine excavations, and engineere
Jan 1, 2009
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Modern Underground Raise and Slot DesignBy N. Rouse
Underground raises and slots are a vital part of underground blasting operations. Raises and slots are vertical shafts or openings used for ventilation, ore passes, or creating voids in stopes. In the
Jan 1, 2024
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Implementation of an Integrated Quality Assurance and Control System Applied to High Complexity Blasting Open PitBy Regina Rocha, Miguel Humpire
One of the challenges within unitary mining operations is blasting, which has a significant downstream impact on the following processes, which is why mining companies ensure the results of the blasti
Feb 6, 2023
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Air Overpressure Monitoring for Underground Production Blasting Operation in LimestoneBy B S. Petri, N T. Rouse
Underground limestone mines generally lack air pressure monitoring procedures and instrumentation guidelines. The blasting industry also lacks an applicable source for air overpressure levels that are
Jan 1, 2014
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Study of Sheet Charge Initiation with Varied Cap Type, Orientation, and DistanceBy C. E. Johnson, R. L. Bauer, E. M. Johnson
In industry, the strength of a blasting cap is often equated to the type of explosive it can detonate. Comparable cap strength is becoming less important as nearly all caps manufactured today can init
Feb 6, 2023
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Rock Slope Remediation on the Pennsylvania Turnpike Bedford, PennsylvaniaBy Ron Woolf, Corry Goumans
This paper describes rock slope remediation performed along America’s first Superhighway, the Pennsylvania Turnpike and in particular, the specialized drilling equipment designed and built by Pacific
Jan 1, 2001