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Strangulation by RegulationBy Donald H. Matthews
The Society of Explosives Engineers is an international organization of over four hundred members involved in the explosives industry, with most members being active in the United States. The regulati
Jan 1, 1980
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A Tiered Approach to Mitigating the Environmental Effects of Underwater Blasting (ISEE)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 not
Jan 1, 1995
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Fragmentation of Sandstones and QuartzitesBy Lewis L. Oriard
Some two million cubic yards of sandstone and orthoquartzite were blasted and excavated at Upper Stillwater Dam, located high in the Uinta Mountains in northern Utah. The material was processed to pro
Jan 1, 1993
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A Look at Explosive Laws and Blasting RegulationsBy Thomas P. Dowling
Historically, laws controlling the manufacture, sale, transportation and storage of high explosives and regulations governing the use of explosives were formulated to prevent accidents or eliminate in
Jan 1, 1976
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Calculation of Rock Motion During Bench BlastingBy Elaine Gorham-Bergeron
CAROM is a distinct element, dynamic code developed at Sandia National Laboratories to calculate the motion of rock fragments during blasting.[1] It has recently been improved to incorporate a mechani
Jan 1, 1987
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The Effect of Low Level Blast Vibrations and the Environment on a Domestic BuildingBy Rob Farnfield, Mike Kelly, Toby White
There are a variety of sources of dynamic stress which can affect a building and give rise to cracking. A two-storey house, situated in the middle of a surface coal mine was monitored for a period of
Jan 1, 1993
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The History of Perimiter Blasting at the Homestake MineBy Justus Deen, Paul Sterk
Overbreak into the wall rock of a development drift leads to the inevitable need to rehabilitate a drift. Moreover, overbreak in a production heading can lead to external dilution and lower ore grades
Jan 1, 1997
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Prediction of Fragmentation Based on Distribution of Explosives EnergyIn situ, most Taconite is heavily pre-fractured; because of the high cost of comminution of taconite, maximum fracture of pre-existing blocks is desirable. Sustained borehole pressure plays a signific
Jan 1, 1995
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Blast Complaints and Impulsive ShockBy K A. Broadhurst
Over the years International Standards have produced and are continuing to work on documents related to damage from blasting and human exposure to whole-body mechanical vibration and repeated shock.
Jan 1, 1988
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A Probability and Risk Based Fragmentation StudyBy Alan R. Cameron, William Forsyth, Tom H. Kleinel
Because good and bad blasting must be defined in terms of overall mining costs, blast optimization requires combined blasting and costing models. Furthermore, the models must be both accurate and comp
Jan 1, 1995
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Reduced Ore Dilution by Controlled Split Round Blasting in Underground Uranium MiningBy John R. Jr Tripi, Paul N. Worsey
Split round blasting is commonly practiced in underground uranium mining in the Big Indian ore belt located in Southeast Utah. The technique is used to prevent ore dilution by separately blasting the
Jan 1, 1985
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Public Relations: A Practical Means to Control Blasting ComplaintsBy I E. "Chip" Harris, G Alan Foster
Whilst a great deal of published data exists as to safe ground vibration and air blast levels which result from blasting little documented research has been carried out to determine how and why human
Jan 1, 1977
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Rock Stitching Coupled with Controlled Blasting - A Cast StudyIt is a case study of huge rock-mass, loosened out from the parent rock-body, & posing a potential danger to structures down below the slope on which this rock mass was standing. Case was dealt in two
Jan 1, 1997
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The Effect of Water Table on Peak Particle Velocities from Blasting OperationsBy Michael Beattie
A large open-cast limestone mine had its blasting operations severely restricted by the imposition of limiting PPV levels to protect a water pipe-line passing through the mine property. Attempts were
Jan 1, 1992
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Air Blast - The Major Cause of Complaings from Blasting?: Its Monitoring and Possible ControlBy G Alan Foster
This paper discusses the cause of air blast and modern techniques to reduce this at the source. In addition it raises the problem of their marked variability due to prevailing weather conditions and h
Jan 1, 1975
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The Effects of Stemming Consist on Retention in BlastholesBy Jim Davis, Calvin J. Konya
The methods used to confine the gases within a borehole can influence the amount of useful energy obtained from the explosive charge. Improper confinement not only wastes energy and raises cost but al
Jan 1, 1978
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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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Environmental Effects of Marine Blasting in Canadian Game RiversBy A Lance McAnuff, Marcus V. van Bers, Andrew Curic
During the summers of 1992 and 1993, blasting operations were carried out to effect the crossing of two of Canada's better known game rivers, the Nipigon and Winnipeg, in connection with the completio
Jan 1, 1994
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Selection of Powder Factor in Large Diameter Blastholes (fd85c28b-31b4-4c7a-b833-27f2a5d736a0)By Jack Eloranta
This paper documents the relationship between material handling and processing costs compared to blasting cost. The old adage, "The cheapest crushing is done in the pit", appears accurate in this case
Jan 1, 1995
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Blasters Initiate Quality Control of ANFO at the BoreholeBy George E. Jackson
ANFO, as a blasting agent, is used in large quantities in coal surface mines. It can be purchased on the open market or through reliable suppliers. The blaster in the field must assume that his ANFO i
Jan 1, 1978