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  • ISEE
    Occidental's Resorts 7 and 8 Blasting Design and Results

    By Thomas E. Ricketts

    Occidental Oil Shale, Inc. constructed two commercial-sized modified in situ (MIS) retorts, Retorts 7 and 8, at its Logan Wash Oil Shale Mine in February and April 1981, respectively. One of the prima

    Jan 1, 1984

  • ISEE
    Blasting Effects on Water Wells

    By D T. Froedge

    Before this study was started, literature was searched and cases of alleged water well damage were investigated. Occurrence of ground water in Appalachia is primarily in low yield, fractured, water ta

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Heat-Resistant Water Gel Explosives

    By Y Omura

    If dynamite is used in hot metal mines, it may be subject to decomposition, and the increase in nitroglycol vapour under the high temperatures causes bad headaches of workers. Also the explosives cont

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    The Pioneer Use of ANFO in Small Boreholes

    By Raymond V. Adolphson

    The introduction of a new explosive component in 1955-56, called ANFO, featured much safer, effective blasting characteristics when compared to dynamite, accompanied by a notable reduction in cost. Th

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Influence of Joint Directions in Blasting

    By Sushil Bhandari

    Presented here is the simplified process of fragmentation of homogeneous rocks by blasting based on experimental studies. Small scale single hole blasting experiments on jointed limestone are describe

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Practical Blasting Damage Investigating for Insurance Claims and Law Suits

    By David A. Paul

    Over the past several years a great deal of information on blasting vibrations and their effects on structures has been generated. Much of this knowledge has been gained through the use of ground vibr

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Safety in Blasting Has No Limits

    By W C. Brukle

    Our title for this presentation could be taken in many ways. One course would be terrifying and that would be to cite incredibly bad practices. All of our votes/efforts should be for the reverse direc

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Production Drilling and Blasting Techniques at the Escalante Silver Mine

    By Eddie L. Catbagan

    The Escalante silver-bearing deposit, consisting of a relatively wide and continuous quartz vein, contains openings ranging from minute to a few feet wide on the footwall and hanging wall. These openi

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    The Development Concept of the Integrated Electronic Detonator

    By Lawson J. Taylor, Paul N. Worsey

    Recent reputable evidence conclusively indicates that conventional chemical delay elements in delay detonators are notoriously inaccurate and can thus seriously affect blasting efficiency.

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Emperical Characterization of Oil Shale Cratering Experiments

    By K Lombardo

    Numerous small- and intermediate-size cratering experiments have been conducted in Piceance Creek Basin oil shale at the Colony and Anvil Points oil shale mines near Rifle, Colorado. The purpose of th

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Vibration: Its Effect & Measurement Techniques at or Near Dwellings

    By Goran Lande, Bernt Larsson, Dennis Clark

    The effects of vibrations on close surroundings has been studied in Europe and the United States extensively in the past three to four years due to the ever increasing demands of environmental control

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    A Study of Misfires in Mining

    By Larry R. Fletcher

    A misfire results when explosives fail to detonate as planned during a mine blast. Accidental detonation of misfires is a frequent cause of personal injury, equipment damage, and lost production. In a

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Analysis of Recent Mine Blasting Accidents

    By Larry R. Fletcher

    The Bureau of Mines obtained blasting accident data from the Mine Safety ant Health Administration (MSHA), U. S. Department of Labor. These data were analyzed to determine the most frequent causes of

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    The Changing Economics of Percussion Blast Hole Drilling

    By Henry P. Jr Van Ormer

    During any blast hole operation the first choice to be made is hole size - it seems simple, just calculate all the factors, spacing, burden, depth, rock characteristics, powder factor, etc. and you ha

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Keeping Airblasts Under Control

    By Jaak J. K Daemen, Clayton R. Morlock

    A study was performed to evaluate the predictability of airblast overpressures induces by production mine blasting. Thirty-seven production blasts were monitored using 3 blasting seismographs giving o

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Estimating Explosive Gas Pressure Distribution

    By John N. Jr Edl

    Geokinetics, Inc. has pioneered an in-situ oil shale retorting production process that provides the requisite void space for producing a permeable rubble bed, within the retort zone, by using the expl

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Fragmentation Measurement Results for Fourteen Full-Scale Production Blasts: A Comparison With a Three Dimensional Wave Code

    By Charles H. Dowding, Catherine T. Aimone

    Rock particle sizes were measured at fourteen steep-slope Appalachian coal mines during production blasting. The distribution of rock sizes shows the effects of inter-hole timing, sequence of hole ini

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Dynamic Shock Tests for Dynamite Slurry and Emulsion Explosive

    By Kenichiro Yamamoto, Masaharu Murakami, Toshio Matsuzawa, Yoshiyuki Ikeda

    In a series of tests, we examined the dynamic shock resistance of Emulsion Explosive in water and compared it with that of Dynamite and Slurry Explosives. Both the distance between donor and acceptor

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Blast Damage Claims Evaluation and The Small Engineering Firm

    By Mark A. Rugen

    It may be difficult to imagine but small engineering companies do exist, even in relatively large cities like San Antonio. Due to the limited capital available for the purchase or use of equipment suc

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    An Engineering Model for Predicting Rubble Motion During Blasting

    By J T. Schamaun

    Recent applications of explosives and blasting agents to rubble rock have led to requirements for more elaborate design and analysis methods. In most blasting uses, it is necessary not only to fractur

    Jan 1, 1983