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Explosives Casting Technology in Surface MiningBy D E. Shaw, J B. Case, J Gusek
Explosive casting of overburden is defined as the use of explosives in blasting to move overburden to a spoil pile without rehandling. Studies of the economic feasibility of the method, and the formul
Jan 1, 1980
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100 ft Deep Kelly Bar Blasting in FloridaBy Dan McCutchen, Oettmeier
Kelly bar drilling and blasting is unique to Florida, the' Bahamas and other marine limestone areas in the world where blast holes are required but will not remain open for the loading of explosives.
Jan 1, 1991
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Limited Void Volume BlastingBy Thomas E. Ricketts
Limited void volume blasting (LVVB) occurs when rock is blasted into a volume that is not sufficient to let the rock expand to its free-bulking value. The freebulking value is obtained when the rock p
Jan 1, 1989
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Blasting SafetyBy Thomas E. Lobb, Harry C. Verakis
Significant progress has been made in the reduction of serious injuries and fatalities resulting from mine blasting operations. Despite the progress, injuries and fatalities continue to occur. A leadi
Jan 1, 2005
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Building and Structural Blasting in HungaryBy Sandor Nagy
The Explosive and Blasting Department of the Hungarian Mining Research Institute is responsible for the research and development of industrial applications of explosives. Appropriate explosives techno
Jan 1, 1977
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Wight Pit High Grade Wall SlashBy Art Frye, Lee Pratt, Gaichang Zhao, Greg Newman
This paper will discuss the Wight Pit wall slash at the Mount Polley open-pit copper-gold mine that scavenged a high grade block of ore from two double-benches of the pit wall. The Wight Pit orebody,
Jan 1, 2011
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Increasing Back Break Using High Speed Blasting TechniquesBy Terry L. Cook
RAG Coal West, Inc., Belle Ayr Mine is located in the heart of Wyoming’s rich Powder River Basin coalfield. Belle Ayr utilizes an open pit, truck/shovel operation to strip the overburden off the 70’se
Jan 1, 2004
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Small Borehole Blasting in High Liability LocationsBy Geff Gordon, Dale Nies
Small diameter borehole blasting can be very efficient and cost effective. As residential development continues to expand, many areas are now requiring blasting for site preparation and upgrading old
Jan 1, 1990
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Explosives and Blasting RegulationsBy D T. Froedge
In 1972 the Kentucky State Legislature enacted House Bill 625 which was known as the Kentucky Blasting Law. This law was enacted primarily to stop problems associated with surface mining, but when it
Jan 1, 1977
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Ground Vibration Attenuation Rate due to Blasting in South FloridaBy Sharkey Bowers
This study was undertaken in order to determine a conservative estimate of the attenuation rate of vibrations through the shallow limestone in South Florida due quarry blasting. The natural limestone
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Vibration Control by Direct Measurement of Crack ResponseBy Charles H. Dowding
Public concern over blast-induced CRACKING has led to the search for a radically new approach to vibration control. The present system, while scientifically correct, is cumbersome to explain. Historic
Jan 1, 1999
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Reducing Eyebrow Break Caused by Rock Blasting in Malmberget Mine (86e4ad65-d689-43b3-b42e-a83837151808)By Z X. Zhang
In sublevel caving mines, eyebrow break usually gives rise to lower ore recovery and worse safety in the field. Eyebrow break is caused mainly by two tensile stress waves: one from the front surface o
Jan 1, 2011
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Hydraulic Boulder Fragmentation using Small Explosive Charges (e17fa3e4-a011-4982-aee2-a189f0d0465a)By Bryan J. Lane, Paul N. Worsey
The recommended maximum explosive weight for boulder blasting using internal charges is 0.1 O-kg/m” (3.5 oz./yd) (Olofsson, 1988). Normally this charge results in excessive scattering and flyrock, cre
Jan 1, 1999
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Quality: a New Approach to Improve Blasting SafetyBy John C. Brulia
Blasting is both an art and a science with the primary objectives being safety and performance. Safety, the paramount objective, is a process that has limitless opportunities for improvement. Quality,
Jan 1, 1993
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Use of Corrtex to Measure Explosive Performance and Stem Behavior in Oil Shale Fragmentation TestsBy Gerald G. Schmitt, Richard D. Dick
Continuous Reflectometry for Radius vs Time Experiments (CORRTEX) was used to monitor several conditions of blasts such as the detonation velocity of the explosive column, the functioning of different
Jan 1, 1985
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Blasting Accidents in Mines, a 16-Year SummaryBy John W. Kopp, David E. Siskind
Over 4 billion pounds of commercial explosives are used by the U.S. mining industry every year with an excellent and improving safety record. However, accidents involving explosives are seldom minor.
Jan 1, 1995
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Geology and Its Effect on BlastingBy W C. Burkle
A rather common observation over the last several decades at least has been that rock or ore properties influence blasting results more than does the explosive type that has been used in the blast. It
Jan 1, 1979
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Time Correlations Between Building Cracks and BlastingIn this paper, the author points out the need to beware of simple time correlations as proof of cause and effect when comparing building cracks and blasting operations. There is a need to be aware of
Jan 1, 1981
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Digital Signal Processign Applied to SeismologyBy Thad M. Jones
This paper considers the sampling, digitizing and reconstruction of seismic signals. A sampling frequency range is proposed and a minimum limit is suggested. Digitizing precision criteria for both pea
Jan 1, 1985
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Open Pit Blasting in IndiaBy D D. Garg, D A. Wasson
Open pit blasting in India uses two types of explosives. First there are bulk explosives for wet and dry holes, and there are packaged explosives. The Indian open pit coal mining is projected to use 1
Jan 1, 1995