RI 2386 Commuted Smokeless Powder as Blasting Agent

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 2017 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 1, 1922
Abstract
In order to meet the emergencies of the world wr, tne quantities of
explosivea produced in the Unitecl States, and the number of explosives plants were
onti:.1.1.:l,lly ncreased so that when the armistice was declared the Government had
on hand larg ..mounts oi militazy explosives in excess of existing military needs. Tle stor3.gs of these explosives entailed a liirge expense and their protection
neessitatei the employment of m'3.l'lY men who could be better employed otherwise in
the military estlish.11ent. Moreover, mar.y ex.ploives, like QJ.l other material, deteriorate on prolonged storage, They lose tht precise definiteness of properties and behavior on which reliance· is placed in military operations, The continued
expen3e and d3.nger ttending storage of theae explosives might be diminished by
dcst1et1on of the surplus beyond immediate needs, but such·deetniction is danger• ou5 qnd coetly. Hence, the evident solution o! the problem was the salvage d
prompt ut111zation of the ru.rplua •
Citation
APA:
(1922) RI 2386 Commuted Smokeless Powder as Blasting AgentMLA: RI 2386 Commuted Smokeless Powder as Blasting Agent. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1922.