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Control of Flyrock in BlastingBy Larry R. Fletcher
Excessive flyrock, which is blasted rock that travels beyond the secured blast area, is responsible for 25 pct of the blasting injuries that occur in surface mining. Excessive flyrock is also a freque
Jan 1, 1986
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The Effect of Rock Strength on Perimiter Blasting and the "Blastibility" of Massive RockBy Qingshou Chen, Paul N. Worsey
It has been recently argued that rock strength has little effect on the final results of pre-split blasting and is of only minor importance when blasting rock in general. However, it can be shown that
Jan 1, 1986
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Cast Blasting: Design and ApplicationsBy Travis Watts, Chris Prater, G. T. Lineberry
Moving overburden at minimal cost is becoming increasingly important to coal mining companies throughout the U.S. The coal market is currently doing well, with an average spot coal price for Central A
Jan 1, 2006
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Application of Air Decking to Blasting - Finding from Numerical ModellingBy P. D. Katsabanish
Air decking applications are examined using numerical modelling and the AutodynTM code. The mechanism of damage is illustrated and discussed. Air decking is shown to provide advantages over stemming w
Jan 1, 2005
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Blasters Initiate Quality Control of ANFO at the BoreholeBy George E. Jackson
ANFO, as a blasting agent, is used in large quantities in coal surface mines. It can be purchased on the open market or through reliable suppliers. The blaster in the field must assume that his ANFO i
Jan 1, 1978
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Spherical Charges Develop Vertical Crater Retreat Method in Stope and Pillar MiningThe breakage mechnism of a spherical charge greatly differs from that of the cylindrical charge used in underground mining. The advantages of the spherical charge could not be utilized until INCO Meta
Jan 1, 1978
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Shock Pressure Transmission Characteristics in a Granitic Rock due to Calibrated Explosive LoadsBy Rakesh Raghavaraju, Bibhu Mohanty
The paper analyzes the decay of shock pressure as a function of distance from the borehole, and its implication on shock-induced fracture properties of the target rock as the first step in predicting
Feb 1, 2020
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Avoiding Tragedy: Lessons to be Learned from a Flyrock FatalityBy Courtney W. Shea, Dennis Clark
Reckless blasting can have tragic consequences: The death of an innocent traveler, the financial demise of a coal company, and even criminal prosecution. In June 1993, a Tennessee coal mining company
Jan 1, 1998
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Splitting Granite Using PyrodexBy G Dean Barrett
Just one year ago at the 1986 Annual Meeting of the Society of Explosives Engineers, Dr. Calvin J. Konya presented a paper entitled "Presplitting Granite Using Pyrodex, A Propellant.'' Since that tim
Jan 1, 1987
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Complying with Sara-Title III: The Community Right-to-Know Act as a Non-Manufacturing FacilityBy Douglas R. Burns
Complying with SARA-Title III and the Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act as a Non-Manufacturing Facility. As of August 23, 1988 non-manufacturing facilities storing end using chemicals
Jan 1, 1989
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Wight Pit High Grade Wall SlashBy Art Frye, Lee Pratt, Gaichang Zhao, Greg Newman
This paper will discuss the Wight Pit wall slash at the Mount Polley open-pit copper-gold mine that scavenged a high grade block of ore from two double-benches of the pit wall. The Wight Pit orebody,
Jan 1, 2011
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Effects of Blasting Vibrations on Uncured Concrete FoundationsBy Thomas A. Simpson, Yung-Kwaun Jow, Dennis L. Gamble
Construction of the $200 million Riverchase Galleria Mall in Hoover, Alabama was started in early 1984. The construction area consists of about 70 acres. The extensive building complex requires heavy
Jan 1, 1985
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Optimized Drilling Through AutomationBy Eric C. Gerst
"In this current era of soft commodity and coal prices the mining industry is turning towards optimizingall levels of production to reduce operating costs. Part of this trend includes the automation o
Jan 1, 2017
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Non-Conventional Performance Characterization of NonelBy L. Russell Payne
The use of shock tube in the blasting industry is relatively well characterized and understood within the realms to which it is used. Non-conventional uses of shock tube within the EOD and the Aerospa
Jan 1, 2008
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Precision-Scale High-Explosive Water Shock ExperimentsBy Charles E. Joachim, Christo V. Lunderman, Charles R. Wdch
The U.S. Army Engineer Waterways Experiment Station (WES) recently conducted a series of precision-scale water shock experiments which consisted of the detonation of several 8-gram, 10-gram, and 12-gr
Jan 1, 1998
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Lithologic Variation and Vibration EffectsBy Edward J. Walter
Vibration control is affected by many factors which are difficult to isolate and evaluate. Occasionally a circumstance occurs in which one factor appears to predominate and its effects can be evaluate
Jan 1, 1981
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Benefits of Bulk Explosive Use in Underwater Drilling and Blasting OperationsBy B R. Spencer
Using bulk repumpable water gel explosives in underwater shooting results in even more benefits to the user than a "dryland" customer. It is nearly impossible to reshoot underwater, so a bad shot caus
Jan 1, 1990
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Modeling of Explosive Loading of Sand with a Coupled Euler-Lagrange CodeBy Leslie C. Taylor, Anthony L. Kee
Computational modeling of explosively loaded saturated sand on a suspended plate is an inherently complex problem. In this study a computational method is used to predict the dynamic pressure load/imp
Jan 1, 2005
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Forthcoming European Directive on Pyrotechnic ArticlesBy R. Wharton, M. Bagley
The paper reviews the likely introduction of a European directive covering the sale of pyrotechnic articles in member states of the European Union. The background and structure of the directive are de
Jan 1, 2007
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Journal: Safety Talk / Blast Area SecurityBy W. Reisz
Blast area security is the responsibility of everyone involved in the blasting operation and goes well beyond simply controlling access by unauthorized personnel.
Jan 1, 2009