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Utilizing Continuous Photo Analysis of Fragmentation as a Blast / Crush Improvement ToolBy James McGough, Lawrence Mirabelli, Ran Tamir
The paper will demonstrate how automated fragmentation photo analysis is being used at the Lafarge North America, Ravena NY quarry as part of an ongoing drill, blast and primary crushing continuous im
Jan 1, 2012
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Bulk Explosives Loading and Delivery Systems Including EconomicsBy Brian Gar Wingfield
Bulk explosive systems have developed from the infancy stages in the early sixties to a sophisticated process of the nineties. With ever changing bulk explosives technology, bulk delivery and loading
Jan 1, 1991
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Geologic Logging of Blastholes to Improve Drilling & Blasting EfficienciesBy Des Bolton
With the introduction of Cast Blasting techniques, field controls of Drilling & Blasting operations became more important. New drills were purchased which were equipped with sophisticated instrumentat
Jan 1, 1994
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ISEE 32nd Annual Conference on Explosives and Blasting Techniques “Safety and Security”By Unknown
Threats to Industry Theft Potential
Jan 1, 2006
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Pressure Measurements in a Low Density ExplosiveBy Guillermo Silva, P. Katsabanis
The conventional approach to design wall control blasts relies on the borehole pressure as the most important explosive parameter. Borehole pressure is intimately linked to explosion pressure, which i
Jan 1, 2003
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High Performance Ground Penetration Radar Project at Los Alamos National LaboratoryBy R F. Hoeberling
"The use of ground penetrating radar (GPR) for geological purposes has been underway for almost two decades. The commercial need for a versatile GPR that can rapidly identify buried objects andundergr
Jan 1, 1994
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New Drill Bit Technology - The Rock Reamer Drill BitBy Roger "Dean" Skaggs
Mechanical rock drilling is about 150 years old, and the fundamental principles of augering, penetration and dragging, pressure and rotation, and percussion have not appreciably changed. Surface minin
Jan 1, 1997
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Blast Vibration and Seismograph Section - Wintertime Seismograph Set-Up BluesBy Bobby Dupree
I remember a big problem with a seismograph in the winter two years ago. In response to a citizen’s complaint I placed a transducer near the corner of a two-story home. It was a pretty nice day for th
Jan 1, 2004
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Blasting Accidents in Surface Mines, a Two Decade SummaryBy Harry Verakis, Thomas Lobb
In the past decade, approximately 5 billion pounds of explosives were used annually in the United States. Most of this quantity of explosives was used by the mining industry and coal mining was the do
Jan 1, 2001
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Possibilities with Accurate Delay Times: Results of Some Field Tests Using Electronic DeotnatorsBy Johan Svard
"Two years of field testing have shown that blasting results are improved both in surface and underground applications when Nitro Nobel electronic detonators are used. The delay times canbe chosen wit
Jan 1, 1992
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Blasting Induced Rock Fragmentation Prediction Using the RHT Constitutive Model for Brittle MaterialsBy Dale Preece, Stephen Chung
Blasting induced rock fragmentation is an art that has been developed and refined for hundred’s of years through blasting and recording the results. Good blasting fragmentation practices were thus dev
Jan 1, 2003
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The History and Development of Permissible Explosives for Underground Coal MiningBy Robert B. Hopler
The hazards which naturally prevail in underground coal mines, always severe and unpredictable due to the loosely-consolidated strata in which coal is frequently found, are increased by the commonly-o
Jan 1, 1996
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The Impact of Blasting on Pit Slope StabilityBy Pefer F. Stacey
This paper considers some of the trends in slope design technology that are emerging as we approach the 21st Century. While the ability to design stable slopes has unproved greatly over the past 20 ye
Jan 1, 1994
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Journal: Safety Talk / Out With The Old and In With the New / It’s Time for a Little Spring-CleaningBy Paul Downing
When was the last time the documents and paperwork were cleaned out of the glove boxes, door pockets, under the seats and above the visors in your company vehicles? Insurance cards that expired three
Jan 1, 2008
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Human Response to Ground Vibration and Air-Overpressure Due to Blasting in Opencast Non-Coal Mines in India: A Case StudyBy M. Ramulu, A. K. Chakraborty, P. B. Sahu, C. Bandopadhyay, P. B. Choudhury
Human response to blast induced vibration and air overpressure is an unsolved problem that accompanies excavation process in mining. Pre-assessment and understanding of annoyance due to production bla
Jan 1, 2004
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BLASTCAD Three Dimensional Underground Blast Design SoftwareBy David Sprott, Patrick Andrieux
In 1990 the Noranda Technology Centre commenced a project to develop an interactive three-dimensional blast design system using a commercial computer-aided drafting and design package (CADD). The obje
Jan 1, 1991
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Practical Experiences with the Use of Air-Decks in Quarry BlastingBy Peter Moser, Frank Chiapetta, Sacha Diaj, Florian Bauer
Good toe breakage and a flat working bench after blasting are important parameters to achieve a high productivity during material loading and reduce the necessity for secondary blasting. Good toe brea
Jan 1, 2009
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The Literature of Explosives and BlastingBy Robert Hopler
The literature of explosives and blasting consists of a great variety of printed materials. These materials include technical papers, books, and articles by individuals and organizations; manufacturer
Jan 1, 2000
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Recent Developments Relating to the Certification of Explosives for Sale in European Union CountriesBy D. Pickering, R. Wharton
The deadline for meeting legal requirements relating to the sale of explosives in the European Union was 1 January 2003. The paper examines the range of materials that have already been certified by t
Jan 1, 2003
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The Use of High Explosives to Conduct a Fisheries Survey at a Nemdway Weir Field on the Middle Mississippi RiverBy Michael Peterson, Robert Davinroy, Robert Rapp, Gregory Hempen, David Herzog, Thomas Keevin
Fish sampling in a deep-water, high velocity, environment is extremely difficult. Conventional techniques such as electro-fishing and netting have been limited to depths generally less than 7 meters (
Jan 1, 2002