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Blasting and Excavating on Precarious Rock SlopesThere 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
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Fire Protection Provided by Detonator ContainersBy Lon D. Santis
The Code of Federal Regulations Title 30, Parts 56, 57, 75, and 77 require that detonators and explosives be separated by four inches of hardwood or equivalents when transported together in mines. Thi
Jan 1, 1997
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Innovation and Change in Quarry BlastingBy Richard D. Love
Competition in the aggregate industry of the 90's will be an over increasing really. With this in mind a quarry manager should always be comparing new and innovative concepts to increase productivity
Jan 1, 1991
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Metafex Composites: Safe, Energetic, Economical Replacements for ExplosivesBy David Davison, Richard Johnson
Metal-oxidant blends are ordinarily unsuitable as diiect replacements for explosives, because the reaction occurs too slowly. Oxide coatings protect metals, preventing or delaying reaction. By contras
Jan 1, 1999
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Seismic Monitoring of Production BlastsBy Klaus G. Hinzen
Seismic observations offer the only possibility for remote sensing of physical processes like shock-front spreading, material crushing and ground movement. A better understanding of these processes wi
Jan 1, 1989
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Environmental Concerns of the Blasting IndustryBy Thomas E. Brown
With the ever increasing public sensitivity to our environment, the blasting industry can no longer be concerned with just drilling and blasting. Government regulations, augmented by public pressure,
Jan 1, 1995
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Computer Design and Field Application of Sub-Seam and Multi-Seam Blasts in Steeply Dipping Coal SeamsCoal 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
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Journal: Kaiser Plant Demolition / Smokestack Demolition at port of Tacoma, WashingtonBy Walt Meglasson
The Kaiser Aluminum Company Smelter, one of several in the Pacific Northwest, was built in 1942 and operated by the Olin Company during World War II and then purchased by Kaiser Aluminum after the war
Jan 1, 2008
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Blasting on the Iroquois TrailBy Charles Joyce, William C. Burkle, Dan Murphy
Rare indeed has a major cross country natural gas pipeline met and surmounted such obstacles as the Iroquois Gas Transmission Line from Canada to Long Island, New York. Of the 370 miles long length a
Jan 1, 1992
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Large Diameter and Deep Hole Presplitting Techniques for Safe Wall Stability (702d8f82-2979-48dc-9390-2e853856733d)By Tom McDonald, Rodney Burke
As mining progresses in the West, the depth of material has increased, making highwall stability a major factor in safety and production. The Jim Bridger Coal Mine has made highwall stability a priori
Jan 1, 1997
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Blast Vibration Measurements at Far Distances and Design Influences on Ground VibrationsBy Kenneth Eltschlager, Steven V. Crum, David E. Siskind
The Bureau of Mines was funded by the Office of Surface Mining (OSM) to determine how blast vibrations from a local surface coal mine were affecting homes in the towns of Daylight and McCutchanville,
Jan 1, 1992
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Rock Slope Remediation on the Pennsylvania Turnpike Bedford, PennsylvaniaBy Ron Woolf, Corry Goumans
This paper describes rock slope remediation performed along America’s first Superhighway, the Pennsylvania Turnpike and in particular, the specialized drilling equipment designed and built by Pacific
Jan 1, 2001
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Vibration Analysis SoftwareBy Charles H. Dowding
This paper describes NUVIB, analytical software to digitize, analyze, display, and plot time histories generated by blasting and construction vibrations. It is available in conjunction with a new book
Jan 1, 1997
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In-Plant Demolition of 900 Cubic Yard Machine BaseBy Ed Jr Smith, Calvin J. Konya
The purpose of this paper is to describe the case history of a blasting project conducted jointly by Precision Blasting Services and Cherokee Explosives. It is the intent of the authors to show how bl
Jan 1, 1986
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Dynamic Shock Tests for Dynamite Slurry and Emulsion ExplosiveBy 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
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Vibration prediction from controlled blast testsBy Nadir Plasencia, Rogerio: Neves Mota
The evaluation of vibrations induced to build structures is one of the main concerns when dealing with blast works. EDP, the main Portuguese producer of electricity is presently incrementing energy pr
Jan 1, 2008
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Considerations on the Effect of Blasting on Downstream PerformanceBy Lyall Workman, Jack Eloranta
In this paper results of drill to mill research are examined. It is found that several descriptors of blasting results change when the powder factor is increased. Fragmentation shifts toward a finer d
Jan 1, 2009
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Determination of Flying Distance of Pieces in Demolishing BlastingBy Zhang Qi
For the most part, the flying piece is serious endangerment in the demolition blasting. To prevent the endangerment, a large number of materials are needed as the protection. Therefore, the determinat
Jan 1, 1994
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Effect of Joint Separation and Filling on Pre-Split BlastingBy Shijie Qu, Paul N. Worsey
Pre-splitting has become widely adopted for the formation and protection of final surface rock excavation profiles in both large scale civil construction and highway rock cuts. Jointing has been shown
Jan 1, 1987
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Constructing a Decline Truck Entrance Tunnel Into Rock Reserves Located Beneath a College CampusBy David R. Holberg
In the Kansas City metropolitan area, mineable Bethany Falls Limestone occurs 80 ft below river level under the 700 acre Park College Campus on the north bank of the Missouri River at Parkville. For 2
Jan 1, 1997