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Using Vibration Prediction to Reduce Blasting Costs and Complaints
By Thomas Leonard, Philip R. Berger, Bryan E. Papillon
Bardon Trimount Inc., a large producer of aggregate, crushed stone, and concrete, was experiencing significant public opposition to its five quarries in the Boston area. It was believed by the authors
Jan 1, 1996
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Electronic Detonators and Lightning – part 2
By C. Lownds, U. Steiner
In 2008 a paper from the same source describing four actual cases of exposure of electronic detonators to lightning strikes was presented. It was shown that electronic detonators, like other initiatio
Jan 1, 2009
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Estimating Explosive Gas Pressure Distribution
By John N. Jr Edl
Geokinetics, Inc. has pioneered an in-situ oil shale retorting production process that provides the requisite void space for producing a permeable rubble bed, within the retort zone, by using the expl
Jan 1, 1983
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Experimental Investigation of the Fumes Produced by Modern Commercial Explosives
By P D. Katsabanis, W Roberts
Commercial explosives exhibit non ideal behaviour which is very difficult to model. The fume spectrum produced by commercial explosives apart from its practical significance for underground mining is
Jan 1, 1992
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Application of Automated and Centralized Rock Fragmentation Analysis
By Matthew Baumann, Bahram Sameti, Tafazoli Zeng Hairong, Edmond Chow
An automated, centralized, image-based rock fragmentation analysis system provides blast engineers with the benefit of minimizing tedious and mundane work, and allows them to focus on their expertise
Jan 1, 2013
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Close-In Construction Blasting -- Impacts and Mitigation Measures
By Andrew F. McKown
This paper will discuss the mechanisms of potential damage from close-in construction blasting, concentrating on two mechanisms: elastic ground vibrations and non-elastic (permanent) ground deformatio
Jan 1, 1991
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Detonator Safety Relation to Measurement Errors
By James G. Stuart, Tassilo N. Baur
We will discuss the kind of procedure that we use to predict the no-fire (for safety) and all-fire (for reliability) current levels for any given type electric detonator. The basic idea is to expose s
Jan 1, 2019
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An Engineering Model for Predicting Rubble Motion During Blasting
By J T. Schamaun
Recent applications of explosives and blasting agents to rubble rock have led to requirements for more elaborate design and analysis methods. In most blasting uses, it is necessary not only to fractur
Jan 1, 1983
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Assessment and Application of a Single-Charge Blast Test at the Kiruna Mine, Sweden
By U Nyberg
Peak particle velocity (PPV) and distance measurements from a single-charge blast test conducted by Swedish researchers in iron ore at the Kiruna Mine in northern Sweden are presented. They are used a
Jan 1, 2011
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Method of Blasting Using Air Tubes Charged in a Blasthole
By Dae-Woo Kang, Sang-Wook Kim, Shin Lee
The Air-tubes blasting method is provided in which a series of aligned boreholes are charged with explosive s and air tubes in a predetermined blasting pattern. The air tube is composed of cylindrical
Jan 1, 2005
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Production Drilling and Blasting Techniques at the Escalante Silver Mine
By Eddie L. Catbagan
The Escalante silver-bearing deposit, consisting of a relatively wide and continuous quartz vein, contains openings ranging from minute to a few feet wide on the footwall and hanging wall. These openi
Jan 1, 1983
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Micro-Meter Measurement of Cracks to Compare Blast and Environmental Effects
By Michael Louis, Charles Dowding
Concern over construction vibration-induced cracking has led to development of a new approach to vibration monitoring called autonomous crack measurement (ACM) and illustrated in Figure 1. This paper
Jan 1, 2003
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The Explosives Industry and Governmental Nexus
By Joshua Hoffman, Rhys Baker, Tim O’Brien
Numerous agencies in the Executive Branch of the United States Federal Government have regulatory jurisdiction over the explosives industry. These agencies develop the rules by which the explosives in
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Source Scaling of Single-Fired and Delay-Fired Explosions Constrained by In-Mine and Regional Seismograms
By Brian Stump, D. Craig Pearson
This work quantifies seismic coupling as a function of charge weight for single-fired (simultaneously detonated) explosions observed in the mine and at regional distances. These single-fired explosion
Jan 1, 2002
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Predicting the Envelope of Damage Resulting from the Detonation of a Confined Charge
By Jason M. Ryan, T Michael LeBlanc, John H. Heilig
"Drill trajectory deviation is a recurring problem in vertical retreat stoping operations. As a result of thisdeviation, 60 kilogram (165 millimetre diameter) and 103 kilogram (203 millimetre diameter
Jan 1, 1996
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Electronic Blast Initiation – The Evolving Perception of Australian Mining Operations
By Greg Wyartt
Although electronic detonators and blast initiation systems have been commercially available for several decades, uptake in the Australian mining industry has been very slow when compared to other glo
Jan 1, 2019
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Blast Control Using Accurate Detonators
By P D. Katsabanis, K Steeves, D Dombrowski
Accurate electronic detonators with firing time accuracy within 100 microseconds of the nominal have been used to control blast results in terms of fragmentation, vibrations and wall control. Axisymme
Jan 1, 1995
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Protection from Liability Before, During, and After Blast Detonation
By Ralph E. Burnham, J. Kelly Ratliff
"The words “dynamite,” “TNT,” “explosives,” and “blasting” typically cause the general public, andjurors, apprehension and fear. Although blasting operations conducted by well-trained, skilled, andexp
Jan 1, 2016
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Blast Modification to Improve Bench Width Reliability at the EKATI Fox Pit
By D Anonby
The Fox Pit at EKATI Diamond Mine is designed with 11 m wide benches excavated using a double benching technique leaving 30 m high faces. Blasting tests were conducted to increase the percentage of be
Jan 1, 2007
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To React Or Not To React? – Tis’a Fuelish Question!
By Michael Wieland
Smoke/fume measurements from rapid transitory charge reactions are not wholly comparable with thermodynamic reaction code (TDRC) results, since quenched chemical reactions yield nonequilibrium concent
Jan 1, 2012