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The Future of Slurry ExplosivesBy Neil E. Gehrig
The word "slurry" was used by Dr. Melvin Cook and Mr. Henry Farnam to describe a new blasting agent developed in 1956. This development, along with the development of ANFO triggered the Modern Era of
Jan 1, 1982
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Theoretical Evaluation of Blastcasting Technique in Strip Mining Multiple Phosphate RocksBy Salah A. Taqieddin
Blast casting or trajectory blasting, as it is sometimes called, is an innovative mining technique that has been receiving increasing acceptance among operations of surface coal mines and quarries as
Jan 1, 1997
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Fragmentation Assessment Using a New Image Processing Technique Based on Adaptive Neuro Fuzzy Inference System (ANFIS)Computational techniques in determining particle size distributions after blasting is getting wide acceptance. A well known approach to extract this kind of information from digital images is edge det
Jan 1, 2004
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Physics Based 3D Rock Blast Movement ModellingBy THOMAS BAMFORD, Dale S. Preece, Amir Behbahanian, Mick Lownds
An important aspect of blasting is rock movement and final muck configuration. Computer modeling of this process has been done in 2D for many years, revealing insights into the blasting process and en
Jan 26, 2026
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The Use of Explosives to Backfill and Reclaim Former Quarry Sites (ebfc87e9-33da-4ee4-ab0c-eaef3d15100a)By Conny Postupack, Jim Petrunyak, John Loope
The authors discuss the concepts, engineering considerations, and cost relationships involved in the use of drilling and blasting to accomplish backfilling and reclamation with minimum use of mechanic
Jan 1, 1987
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The Effect of Precise Millisecond Delay on Fragmentation at the Rock of Ages QuarryBy Raymond H. Green, Mitchell W. Green
The authors examined the application of precise millisecond delay electric blasting at a well-known Vermont quarry. The paper explains how the use of a new high-accuracy electric delay detonator has i
Jan 1, 1986
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Blast Preconditioning – A Development and Operational ChallengeBy 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
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Blast-Induced Rock Fracturing and Minimizing Downstream Comminution Energy ConsumptionBy Farshad Rashidi Nejad, Ali Asgari, Sanaz Norouzi
Blasting is known as the first step of rock breakage in mines. An indication of the importance of blasting is that more than 1 billion kg (2.2 billion lb) of explosives are used annually in Australia
Jan 1, 2015
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Surface Blaster Training and Licensing in PennsylvaniaBy Charles A. Nork
Licensing of surface blasters as a regulatory requirement has been in effect in Pennsylvania for more than twenty years. Training of license applicants was begun in 1971 on a random basis. Formalizati
Jan 1, 1985
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Journal:Security Matters / Procedures to Follow When Explosives Are Missing From Inventory (e.g., Disposition Unrecorded/Unknown)Prepare ATF Report of Theft or Loss (ATF Form 5400.5). A Report of Theft or Loss - Explosives Materials must be prepared when it is discovered that explosive materials are missing from inventory. Subm
Jan 1, 2008
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Blasthole Pressure: What it Really Means And How We Should Use itBy Claude Cunningham
Blasthole pressure is the starting point for many blast design calculations, but the way in which it is usually derived, from measured detonation velocity, indicates that more thought is needed as to
Jan 1, 2006
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Instrumental Detection of a Climatologically-Induced Cosmetic Crack in Wall CoveringBy Pierre-Alexandre Abeel, Charles Dowding, Justin Lueker
When blasting is eliminated as a cause of cosmetic cracking, often someone will ask, “If blasting didn’t cause the crack, then what did?” This paper describes detection by remotely operated instrument
Jan 1, 2015
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Remote Radio Control BlastingBy Scott Gustfason, Richard N. Snyder
What is a safe stand-off distance? Recent mishaps using conventional blasting equipment have seen flyrock as distant as 3,750 feet from the blast area, or close to three-quarters of a mile, therefore,
Jan 1, 1987
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Shaped Charge Induced Concrete Damage Predictions Using RHT Constitutive ModelingBy Dale S. Preece, Vanessa S. Berg
Shaped charges are being utilized in defense applications against a wider variety of targets including concrete, rock, and soil. This work was motivated by a heightened interest in characterizing the
Jan 1, 2004
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Single Decoupled Blasthole Tests and the Significance of the Results to Presplitting and Boulder BustingBy Syed M. Tariq, John W. Wilson, Paul N. Worsey
The position of a major joint in relation to a blasthole has a significant effect in presplitting. Broad research into the combined effects of firing two decoupled blastholes has been performed in the
Jan 1, 1996
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Explosive Performance Measurements on Large, Multiple-Hole Arrays and Large Masses of Conventional ExplosiveBy Donald D. Eilers, Pharis E. Williams, Thomas O. McKnown
The Continuous Reflectometry for Radius vs. Time Experiment (CORRTEX) system was developed by the Los Alamos National Laboratory for determining the energy released in a nuclear explosion by measuring
Jan 1, 1995
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Less Fines Production in Aggregate and Industrial Minerals IndustryBy Peter Moser
The average annual consumption of raw minerals in Europe is 10 ton per person. About 50 % is produced by blasting. For a population of 450 million (including the population from the countries of the n
Jan 1, 2004
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Safe Blasting Near Important Civil Structures: A Case StudyBy T. N. Singh, Vasudev Singh
Most of the surface mines in India have drilling and blasting practice as excavation method. All the mines have to keep the blast vibration level below a certain limit. But when mining operation is ne
Jan 1, 2006
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Micro-Meter Measurement of Cracks to Compare Blast and Environmental EffectsBy Michael Louis, Charles Dowding
Concern over construction vibration-induced cracking has led to development of a new approach to vibration monitoring called autonomous crack measurement (ACM) and illustrated in Figure 1. This paper
Jan 1, 2003
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Expandable Packaged ANFO in the FieldBy Donald E. Rossow
In the mining industry ANFO continues to be the primary source of explosive energy. The three most commonly used loading methods are bulk, pour in 50 lb. multiwall bags and cylindrical shaped wet hole
Jan 1, 1985