RI 3319 Earth Vibrations Caused By Quarry Blasting ? Introduction (da5a0751-3148-4946-a532-9663066554bd)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 11353 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1936
Abstract
This paper purposes to outline briefly results of seismic measurements made in the vicinity of blasts in a mine and in open-quarry operations. It endeavors to examine the amplitude and frequency of such vibrations as influenced by the loading, geology, and distance from the source and includes comments on factors that may index the destructiveness of a vibration and a method for measuring the stresses produced. There seems to be no simple mathematical analysis of the transmission of seismic energy through the ground, and experimental observations are at present most feasible. SEISMOLOGIC INSTRUMENTS Instruments developed by the Bureau of Mines for recording ground vibrations from quarry blasting comprise a new type of seismometer, oscillators, and a recording oscillograph. The seismometers respond to vibrations reaching them through the earth and transmit their characteristics by electric current to the oscillograph, where they are recorded by a beam of light on a moving strip of sensitized photographic paper. The seismometers are so constructed that their sensitivity to earth vibration can be controlled, thus keeping the amplitude of the recorded wave within bounds on the paper. Each instrument has been calibrated against vibrations of known intensity and frequency so that correction factors are known for the idiosyncracies of each unit. Moreover, each seismometer is calibrated in the field for its particular sensitivity setting at each blast. By these controls the actual movement of the earth due to vibrations of one ten-thousandth of an inch can be accurately measured.
Citation
APA:
(1936) RI 3319 Earth Vibrations Caused By Quarry Blasting ? Introduction (da5a0751-3148-4946-a532-9663066554bd)MLA: RI 3319 Earth Vibrations Caused By Quarry Blasting ? Introduction (da5a0751-3148-4946-a532-9663066554bd). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1936.