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  • ISEE
    Explosives Training Modules and Econex Approach

    By Fred C. Drury

    The Explosives Engineer's concern for personnel training in the safe, efficient and effective use of explosives materials has grown in recent years. Available training options have also grown. Today's

    Jan 1, 1981

  • ISEE
    Training and Licensing Requirements for Blasters

    By Stanley L. Lippincott

    A number of Federal and State agencies require formal training for blasters. Federal agencies often specify the need for initial training involving all job responsibilities as well as periodic refresh

    Jan 1, 1995

  • ISEE
    Designing Blasts with Uncertainty and Tolerance

    By Calvin J. Konya

    When blasts are designed, we normally assume the best case situation. We assume that all burdens and spacings will be properly drilled, holes will be properly loaded, initiators will fire at the nomin

    Jan 1, 1990

  • ISEE
    Explosive Energy and Muck-Pile Diggability

    By Dale S. Preece, Stephen H. Chung

    "In bench blasting, the distribution of loaded explosives with respect to the burden rock has strong effects on digging especially at the toe area. Blast design often focuses on other results such as

    Jan 1, 1999

  • ISEE
    Long Term Vibration and Damage Effects

    Vibration resulting from blasting has been a source of concern from the inception of the use of explosives. As a result many investigations have been made concerning the seismic effects of blasting an

    Jan 1, 1976

  • ISEE
    Coyote Shooting at Pennsylvania Glass Sand Corporation Berkeley Springs, West Virginia

    By D T. Froedge

    This paper is a presentation of a coyote shot at the Oriskany Sand Quarry of the Pennsylvania Glass Sand Corporation, Berkeley Springs, West Virginia.

    Jan 1, 1982

  • ISEE
    Vibration and Air Blast Levels of Natural Phenomena and Normal Activities Compared to Levels of Blasting

    By Judy Konya Bowles, Calvin J. Konya

    Blast vibration and air blast are commonly blamed for damages to residential as well as commercial structures. Mining and construction companies are often required to spend monies in court defending t

    Jan 1, 1992

  • ISEE
    Construction Blasting in Central Oregon

    By Paul Schmiesing, Matt Higgins

    Central Oregon is a fast growing resort community centered in Bend, Oregon. Bend is bordered by the Cascade Mountains to the west and the high dessert to the east. Central Oregon is blanketed with lav

    Jan 1, 2000

  • ISEE
    Computer Design and Field Application of Sub-Seam and Multi-Seam Blasts in Steeply Dipping Coal Seams

    Coal strip mine operators in Western Canada often mine steeply-dipping multiple coal seams in mountainous terrain. The ability to fragment the rock waste layers above and below these seams with minimu

    Jan 1, 1985

  • ISEE
    Development, Testing and Practical use of Two Special Containment Vessels for Storage and Transportation of High Explosives

    By Hubert den Dikken

    ache, especially when it comes to forwarding of small quantities. Air transport is limited to 1.4 explosives on cargo aircraft and 1.4S classified explosives on passenger aircraft, so most samples can

    Jan 1, 1995

  • ISEE
    MINE AUTOMATION PROGRAM: Drill and Blast Analvsis

    By Lawrence Mirabelli, Wayne Lidkea, Mario Paventi

    On Januarv 1, 1996, INCO Limited, Tamrock OY, Dyno Nobel and CANMET formed a consortium for the development of robotic mining equipment called the Mining Automation Program (MAP). This project was a t

    Jan 1, 2001

  • ISEE
    A Blasting Agent Having Unusually Low Velocity and Producing Unusually Low Ground Vibration and Large Burden Displacement

    By D Linn Coursen

    Detonation propagates in the subject blasting agent at about 2.7 km/sec when it is heavily primed but explosion propagates in it at only about 0.43 km/sec when it is lightly primed. When propagating a

    Jan 1, 1994

  • ISEE
    Pyrotechnic Mortar Pressure and Exit Velocity Study

    By R. Sibley, K. Perry, E. McCorkle, M. Coy

    Black powder has been used in fireworks since the 10 th century in China. To this day, black powder still has a variety of uses, including fireworks, and remains relatively unchanged. Black powder is

    Jan 1, 2024

  • ISEE
    Vibration and Flyrock Control Through Better Predictions

    By Daodu Opeyemi

    This paper describes several damages of blasting operations on some case studies, analyzes causative factors, and emphasizes preventive measures. Due to several complaints from some host mining commun

    Jan 1, 2009

  • ISEE
    Gurney’s Journey—pipe-bomb Fragments And Fumes

    By Michael Wieland

    The thrust of this report is to overcome some of the technical deficiency in the scientific methodology that correlates the work output during a charge explosion to the resulting toxic fumes. Thermody

    Jan 1, 2010

  • ISEE
    Prediction and Determination of Explosive-Induced Fracture

    By J R. Hearst, T R. Butkovich

    Explosive-induced fracturing and permeability enhancement far from a free face were studied. A one-dimensional computer program, SOC, was used to predict the total failure-associated distortional stra

    Jan 1, 1976

  • ISEE
    History and Expansion of the Panama Canal

    By R Frank Chiappeta, Eduardo Nixon, John Dean Smith, Tom Treleaven

    "The creation of the Panama Canal was far more than a vast, unprecedented feat of engineering. It was a profoundly important historic event and a sweeping human drama not unlike that of war. Apart fro

    Jan 1, 1998

  • ISEE
    Computer Assisted Blast Design and Assessment Tools

    By Thomas H. Kleine, Alan R. Cameron, William W. Forsyth

    In general the software required by a blast designer includes tools that graphically present blast designs (surface & underground), can analyze a design or predict its result, and can assess blasting

    Jan 1, 1995

  • ISEE
    Blast Preconditioning – A Development and Operational Challenge

    By Jeff Gore, Jack Dermody, David Gribble, Brett Macaulay, Bart Sharpe, Paul Klaric, Paul Thornley, Ben DeVries

    Optimal Fragmentation in Block Caving is difficult to achieve as it is generally defined by the rock mass itself and the way in which the cave is initiated. The lower portion of the cave has even less

    Jan 1, 2013

  • ISEE
    Blasting and Excavating on Precarious Rock Slopes

    There is an intuitive tendency to equate rock strength with rock stability, yet the two must be evaluated separately. A slope in strong hard rock is not necessarily stable, nor is a slope in weathered

    Jan 1, 1996