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The Development of an Inhibited Explosive for Black Pyritic Reactive Shale (7d7c104e-e6d0-4205-a9a2-1931966d478c)
By P Bellairs
The Hamersley Province is located 1000km to the North of Perth the Capital City of Western Australia and is of major economic significance due to the mining of extensive deposits of Haematitic Iron Or
Jan 1, 1996
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Dynamic Pressure Measured in a Water-filled Hole Adjacent to a Short Explosive Charge Detonated in a Rock
By A T. Spathis, M G. Wheatly
Some preliminary dynamic pressure data were obtained from several charges detonated in a tunnel situated in massive granite rock. The context of the work is the potential for desensitisation of explos
Jan 1, 2016
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A New and Reliable Technique for Safely Removing Underground Rock Hang-ups
By Brian Micke, Mick Gavrilovic
The problem of rock hang-ups in underground mining operations has been a continuing one since the days of the “hang-up man”. This position commanded the highest pay of any underground worker in many h
Jan 1, 1999
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Roadblocks: Increasing Production, Reducing Problems
By Greg Parker
"As the Explosives Industry continues to evolve and condense, those involved, such as Blasters,Contractors, Distributors and Consultants, continue to be challenged by both internal and externalforces.
Jan 1, 1999
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Back to the Basics; Nonelectric Initiation Shock Tube Systems, Part 2: General Applications
By 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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Carbon Monoxide Poisoning – Commercial Explosives, Rock Blasting and Construction Work in Inhabited Areas
By Nadya Michel, Daniel Gros-Jean
This is a true story. Names have been changed to illustrate the importance and impact of carbon monoxide risk management in explosive blast projects and the community « Honey I’m not feeling good…” “W
Feb 6, 2023
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Safety Talk - Misfires: What All Employees Need to Know
By Robert Morgan
The mind-set that only blasters and their helpers need training in explosives can result in risk to other employees working at mine or construction sites where blasting is conducted. Misfires are not
Jan 1, 2004
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Field Studies of CO Migration from Blasting
By Richard J. Mainiero, Michael J. Sapko, Marcia L. Harris
Since 1988, there have been thirteen documented incidents in the United States and Canada in which carbon monoxide (CO) is suspected to have migrated through near surface strata into structures or oth
Jan 1, 2005
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The Assessment of Detonation Codes for Blast Engineering
By C V. B Cunningham
The assessment of blasting results under production conditions is extremely difficult. As a result, it can take months or years to establish objective and valid estimates of explosive performance in a
Jan 1, 1991
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Techniques to Assess the Influence of Blast Design Parameters on Airblast and Blast Vibration
By Robert Hivick, Frank Sames
The control of environmental effects, especially blast vibration and airblast, has become a dominating planning criterion for most surface blasting operations. Compliance with existing regulations is
Jan 1, 1999
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Vibration Effects on Historic Structures
By Randy Wheeler
One of the more difficult topics to address concerns the effects of vibration on historic structures. Not only blast induced vibration, but also vibration from other transient and semi-continuous sour
Jan 1, 2004
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Impact of fine Aluminum on ANFO Explosives
By O. Rielo, P. Katsabanis
Traditionally fine aluminum is not used in dry commercial explosives due to the hazard associated with aluminum dust explosions during mixing. An industrial process has been developed which enables th
Jan 1, 2009
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The EU Project “I.C.E.A. Identification Colors of Explosives & Blasting Accessories”
By Gennaro Di Lauro, Laura Meraviglia, Demostenes Efstratiadis, Danilo Coppe
This paper presentation regards the European Union’s project “I.C.E.A. - Identification Colors of Explosives and Blasting Accessories (Agreement number – HOME/2010/ISEC/AG/071 – 30 – CE – 0447240/00-1
Jan 1, 2015
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Journal: The Shale Gas Revolution The Technology that made it Possible
By David Leidel
A revolution in hydrocarbon well completions within the last thirty years has enabled drillers to tap the resources of known gas plays in an economically viable manner and deliver to market natural ga
Jan 1, 2014
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Comparison of Field and Simulated Cast Blasts
By R. F. Favreau, Patrice Favreau, Dennis Mahan
Cast blasting is becoming more and more popular, not only in coal mines but also in other operations which require excavation of an upper layer of waste rock to uncover temporarily and excavate a laye
Jan 1, 2014
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Underground Blast Doors: Measured Pressure Drop and Human Exposure Safety
By Matthew Hirsch, Jason Connot, Nathan Rouse, Srivatsan Jayaraman, Akash Adhikari, Brent Meins, Purushotham Tukkaraja
The Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) is a world-class particle physics research project currently being constructed 4,850 ft, 1,478 m underground at the Sanford Underground Research Facilit
Feb 6, 2023
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Vibration Control in a Tunnel Project under an Existing Hospital
By Pertti Paavola, Hikki Rasanen
This paper describes a very exacting tunneling project. Planning and technical realization of this service and transportation tunnel was especially difficult as a matter of vibration control, because
Jan 1, 1997
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Sequence of Events During a Blast
By Patrice Favreau, R. F. Ph. D. Professor Emeritus Favreau
After Nobel invented dynamite, blasts were carried out by trial and error, without the use of equations based on the fundamental principles of Chemistry and Physics, although everyone accepted that sh
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Highway Lane Rental Requirement Compromises Blast Site Safety and Security
By Harry L. Siebert
A major Arizona highway project is jeopardizing site safety and security because of the lane rental policy. One million cubic yards of rock must be fragmented to provide two additional lanes parallel
Jan 1, 1997
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Richter Scale and PPV
By Wilfrid Comeau
The RICHTER scale is used in classifying earthquake severity. It is an energy scale giving the estimated energy liberated at the source of the earthquake. Earthquake damage on the earth’s surface, for
Jan 1, 2003