Blasting With Commercial Grade Ammonium Nitrate At The Utah Copper Pit Of The Kennecott Copper Corporation

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Laurence E. Snow
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
1000 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1959

Abstract

The conversion to the use of commercial grade ammonium nitrate (CGAN) for use in blasting at the Utah Copper Pit of the Kennecott Copper Corporation has presented unique problems for the Drilling and Blasting Department, In order to better understand these problems, a' picture of the Bingham Pit might be helpful. Some quarter of a million tons of ore and waste must be blasted daily in order to keep thirty-eight electric shovels operating. All material is blasted by "toe holes" of 24 to 28 feet in depth, drilled from prepared drill grades and sloped so as to bottom approximately 5 feet below the bench level. Horizontal spacing of these holes averages 22 feet, with exceptions being made where faults occur in the bank. These "toe holes" are drilled by 4-inch drifter machines, mounted on self-contained mobile drill units using .3-inch starter bits and bottoming at a minimum of 2 1/2 inches in diameter, "Toe-hole" drilling amounts to about two-thirds of the total drilling. In the higher bank sections of the Mine and wherever necessary, single rows of "down holes" are drilled to 28 feet in depth and spaced, on the average 23 feet apart. These holes are also drilled by a mobile drill. "Down hole" drilling amounts to about one-third of the total drilling.
Citation

APA: Laurence E. Snow  (1959)  Blasting With Commercial Grade Ammonium Nitrate At The Utah Copper Pit Of The Kennecott Copper Corporation

MLA: Laurence E. Snow Blasting With Commercial Grade Ammonium Nitrate At The Utah Copper Pit Of The Kennecott Copper Corporation. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1959.

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