Ground Motions from and House Response to Underground Aggregate Mining

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Northwestern University Gordon Revey Mike Wladron
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
1033 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

A unique judicial opportunity allowed measurement of the response of three cracks in residential structure to blasting for underground aggregate mining. Instrumented cracks were located in the interior basement CMU mortar and upstairs dry wall as well as exterior brickwork. The dynamic environment was unusual. Even though the blasting occurred some 490 m (1600 ft) away, excitation frequencies were unusually high and there were no apparent surface waves. In addition there was no air overpressure wave to produce secondary crack response. As is typical, long term environmental effects produced greater crack response than did the blast induced ground motions.
Citation

APA: Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Northwestern University Gordon Revey Mike Wladron  (2007)  Ground Motions from and House Response to Underground Aggregate Mining

MLA: Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering Northwestern University Gordon Revey Mike Wladron Ground Motions from and House Response to Underground Aggregate Mining. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2007.

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