The American Table of Distances: A Document Based on Centuries of Explosives Experience

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Robert Hopler
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
14
File Size:
309 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

Accidents associated with the storage of explosives prompted regulating the locations of such storage at least as early as 1719, when an act was passed in Great Britain. During the following years various refinements to the regulations were made, but a major explosion in 1864 in which there was destruction and loss of life as far away as 10 miles, led to the landmark Explosives Act of 1875. This act certainly had influence on regulators in the United States: when Massachusetts established an explosives distance/weight table in 1904 they referred to the prior British work. Later, Colonel Dunn of The American Railway Association convened a conference of explosives manufacturers to discuss safe storage. From this conference the American Table of Distances was established in December, 1910.
Citation

APA: Robert Hopler  (2007)  The American Table of Distances: A Document Based on Centuries of Explosives Experience

MLA: Robert Hopler The American Table of Distances: A Document Based on Centuries of Explosives Experience. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2007.

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