IC 6158 Explosions and other accidents from mudcapped shots in coal mines

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 384 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 1, 1929
Abstract
Each year at least one and in some years several explosions are reported as having resulted from firing of mudcapped shots in coal mines; undoubtedly a number of small or local explosions occur that are not reported; in addition there are numerous accidents, some of them fatal, attributable to this reprehensible blasting practice. It is surprising that so few explosions and other accidents from this cause occur since the practice of firing mudcapped, Even in gassy "adobe," "dobe," "sand blast," or "bulldozed" shots is widespread. mines where general blasting is safeguarded by being done with permissible explo- sives, rocks or bowlders frequently are blasted with mudcapped shots of dynamite; even if permissible explosives are used, this type of shooting is dangerous.
The usual method of preparing a mudcapped shot is to place the explosive, either in loose or cartridge form, with the detonator or "cap" on top of a piece of rock or coal and cover it with several handfuls of moist clay, loam, sand, or When the shot is road dust; in many cases there is no covering of any kind.
fired a dense cloud of dust, together with an intensively hot fleme, are thrown into suspension, and if the dust is explosive or ignitable an explosion or igni- tion is likely to result practically simultaneously. The presence of gas greatly increases the explosibility of the dust, as well as the probability of an ignition. Every shot, of any known explosive, fired in a coal mine without having the charge properly confined in a drill hole and tamped with incombustible stemming to the collar of the hole, is capable of initiating an explosion that may cause the death of every man in the mine.
Attention has recently been directed to this unsafe practice by an explo- sion resulting from a flagrant disregard of safe blasting practices in one of our The mine had been idle for several years most productive coal-mining regions. and was being prepared for reopening on a different system of mining. Six to 10 inches of bottom coal had been left in place during former mining operations, but in the new system it was felt desirable to remove the bottom coal left in certain parts of the mine. Instead of drilling holes in the coal, loading them, and fir- ing in the usual safe manner, five or six charges of dynamite were placed on top of the coal in each of several rooms; and while the men were at the mouth of the
Citation
APA:
(1929) IC 6158 Explosions and other accidents from mudcapped shots in coal minesMLA: IC 6158 Explosions and other accidents from mudcapped shots in coal mines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1929.