Segregation Blasting Using Electronic Initiation at the Coeur Rochester Mine, Nevada

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Donald Wagstaff D. Scott Scovire
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
589 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

The Coeur Rochester Mine is the largest primary silver surface mine in North America. Throughout its 17-year life, gold and silver grades leaving the tertiary crusher have typically been, on average, slightly below the mined bench grades as determined by blast hole assays. On a project-to-date basis, this grade variance is well within industry standards. While these variances are acceptable, mine personnel continue to study ways to further minimize the grade differences. One suspected cause for lower than expected head grades are ore loss and dilution resulting from blast-induced shot movement. In regard to grade control, the underlying design principle for non-electric blasts is the generation of uniform movement of the blasted rock material. Using one or two uniform directions of initiation, ore control methods at Rochester currently include adjusting flag lines on the muckpile in an attempt to account for displacement from original, pre-blast locations. To improve upon standard non-electric blasting practices, a series of evaluation blasts using an electronic initiation system (Orica i-konTM) was conducted in the summer of 2002. The primary objective of the evaluation blasts was to design shots that would segregate the ore and waste blocks into distinct muckpiles. Due to surface delay burning front limitations, truly effective ore and waste segregation blasting is difficult to accomplish with non-electric initiation systems for all but the most basic of ore geometries. The electronic detonator evaluation blasts produced visible boundaries in post blast muckpiles, identified by troughs or low areas, that closely matched the actual locations of pre-blast ore control flag lines based on blast hole assays. By blasting the ore and waste into distinguishable piles that were flagged and excavated accordingly, it is believed that blast-induced ore loss and dilution was reduced.
Citation

APA: Donald Wagstaff D. Scott Scovire  (2004)  Segregation Blasting Using Electronic Initiation at the Coeur Rochester Mine, Nevada

MLA: Donald Wagstaff D. Scott Scovire Segregation Blasting Using Electronic Initiation at the Coeur Rochester Mine, Nevada. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2004.

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