RI 7753 Fracturing In The Zone Around A Blasthole, White Pine, Mich.

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 23
- File Size:
- 8188 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1973
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines has studied the fracturing and associated damage occurring in the vicinity of blastholes from five shots fired in the shale pillars in the White Pine copper mine, White Pine, Mich. Four types of explosives (AN-FO, commercial extra dynamite, ammonia gelatin dynamite, and a low-density, low-velocity permissible) were used. Cores were taken from the blast region and examined by ultrasonic and petrographic techniques. Pulse wave velocities were measured across the core diameters, and thin sections showing cracks and changes in lithology were examined in an attempt to establish zones of damage. Cores from the blast regions and areas near pillar free faces were found to have abnormally low pulse velocities. Petrographic study of the thin sections showed that the negative velocity anomalies were caused by cracks in the cores. Crushing and extensive fracturing prevented meaningful measurements on core fragments from the immediate blast vicinities. Compositional, changes and other rock nonuniformities, such as joints and preexisting fractures, tended to mask detailed damage differences among the four explosives; however, the two most energetic explosives (extra dynamite and ammonia gelatin dynamite) produced damage zones two to three times as large as the AN-FO and low-velocity permissible explosives.
Citation
APA:
(1973) RI 7753 Fracturing In The Zone Around A Blasthole, White Pine, Mich.MLA: RI 7753 Fracturing In The Zone Around A Blasthole, White Pine, Mich.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1973.