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Microseconds Matter in MonitoringBy Gregory B. Poole
Data collected with 16K sampling at a variety of blasting sites (construction, quarry, trench, mine) and monitoring locations was analyzed to effectively show the 16 different 1K readings all based on
Feb 1, 2020
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The History of Intraline Distance in the United StatesBy Michelle Crull, Susan Hamilton
Explosives safety requirements in the United States began in 1909 when the American Railroad Institute questioned explosives manufacturers regarding distances necessary to protect employees and proper
Jan 1, 2010
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Comparison of Compliance Measures for Blasting near an Industrial Structure Vibration Monitoring Standards Connected to the use of Explosives in Different Countries, Part IIIBy C. Aimone-Martin, C. Dowding, M. Jern, J. Gjødvad
This article compares percentages of compliance for six national standards to demonstrate how these standards vary on-site in a real project. This, to the best of the authors' knowledge, has not been
Jan 1, 2024
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Debris Directionality Comparison: Full Scale Tests to Q/D and QRABy Lon Santis, Bill Evans, John Tatom
Debris data from the Department of Defense Explosives Safety Board’s Project ESKIMORE full-scale explosives event test program are compared to quantity-distance (Q/D) standards and quantitative risk a
Jan 1, 2015
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Blast Vibration Analysis from Signature HolesBy Nikolaos Petropoulos, Ulf Nyberg, Daniel Johansson
A series of signature boreholes were blasted to observe any difference between confined and free face blasts. Four geophones were used to capture the compressive wave. The conventional approach, i.e.
Feb 1, 2020
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Shock Tube Detonator Shelf Life in Relation to Timing AccuracyBy Joshua Hoffman, Philip Mulligan, Braden Lusk, Tristan Worsey
Blasters rely upon detonators to achieve the designed timing sequence to move material where it needs to go, minimize vibration, or optimize fragmentation. At times detonator inventory on seldom used
Jan 1, 2013
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Flyrock Control - By Chance or DesignBy Adrian J. Moore, Alan B. Richards
Responsible blasting requires that rock throw be controlled to ensure that no danger will result to people and property. This paper describes the development and testing of empirical field calibrated
Jan 1, 2004
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Customer Site Safety at OricaBy Frank Barker
Mining operations present a very different environment to the suppliers of explosives, initiating systems and services, both on surface and underground. Typical hazards include underground movement, a
Jan 1, 2000
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Minimising Coal Loss through the use of Geophysical LoggingBy Rob Lederer, Chris Batten
Traditionally coal model digital terrain models (DTM) are created from lithological information obtained from broad scale exploration holes. The grid layout and distance between holes means that model
Jan 1, 2012
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Vibration impact reduction to the community through low density bulk emulsion.By E. Líder, J. Pavez, J. Rivera
The application of new technologies, methodologies, and the use of new products in mining operations is a practice that is becoming more common in the industry every day, added to the new challenges a
Jan 1, 2024
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Digital Shock TubeBy Theirry Bernard
The era of non-electric systems as an initiating system has revolutionised the blasting world by introducing a very safe initiating system that is reliable, with initiation sequence possibilities that
Jan 1, 2007
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Blasting Techniques to Prevent Coal Loss and DamageBy Visitor Makiyi, Chris Batten
Poor coal recovery due to coal damage or loss caused by blasting can have a significant impact on a mining operation. Increasing coal recovery by reducing blast damage can provide a significant opport
Jan 21, 2025
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Safety Challenges of the '90sBy Milos J. Bila
I would like to discuss today several safety topics that we at Nobel feel are going to be particularly critical to all of us who are involved in the manufacturing, transportation, storage and use of c
Jan 1, 1992
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Mine Blasting Safety: Decades of ProgressBy Harry Verakis, Thomas Lobb
Blasting accident data over a 30-year period (1980-2010) are summarized and presented for all types of surface and underground mining operations in the USA. The historical record of injuries from blas
Jan 1, 2012
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Drilling and Blasting Techniques for Sinking a Well in a Water Reservoir-A Case Study for Underwater Controlled Blasting Methodology and MonitoringBy Deepesh Yadav, B. S. Choudhary
Underwater drilling and blasting is conducted for deepening of sea channels for port berths, lake or reservoirs for water supply etc. so that rock dredging becomes easier. During this process there ar
Jan 1, 2018
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Analysis of Air Blast Overpressures within a Negative Pressure BoundaryBy Frederick B. Kuhnow
Harmonic energetic delamination of T2 building is being considered for demolition at a formerly known atomic lab. The T2 building is within a containment structure that is under a negative pressure of
Jan 1, 2017
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Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Associated to Blasting Operations Close to HouseBy Pierre Auger, Benoit Levesque, Richard Martel, Guy Sanfacon, Louis-Charles Boutin, Marc-Andre Lavigne, Patrick Brousseau, Luc Trepanier, Louise Galarneau
Explosives used for blasting operations in civil engineering works, like construction of piping systems under roads, of pools, of houses and buildings can generate large volumes of carbon monoxide (CO
Jan 1, 2002
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Full Emulsion Application Development for Underground GalleriesBy Gloria Contreras
The study aims to optimize the density of holes per tunnel section. The energy distribution, the one with the highest density, is used in the center of the diagram and is distributed homogeneously to
Feb 1, 2020
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Journal: Lightning - Understanding the Danger, Managing the Risk.By Greg Quinn
After a long week of work in Colorado Springs this past July, I was looking forward to flying home to start a long anticipated family vacation. As I grabbed my seat on the plane, a man sitting next to
Jan 1, 2012
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Expanded Blast Design For Tight Controlled Hard Rock Trenching Adjacent To Twin Burried Live Oil PipelinesBy A. Ravi Kumar
A trench is a structure to accommodate fluid carrying pipelines for water, gas, petroleum products etc. Trench serves the purpose to haul the fluids in bulk over long distances safely and economically
Jan 1, 2008