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Blasthole stoping - drilling accuracy and measurementBy F. Boudreault, M. J. Scobie, J. Szymanski, C. Hendricks
The development of new stoping methods and more effective control over dilution, recovery and fragmentation depends on improved accuracy in blasthole drilling. The mechanisms and factors which control
Jan 12, 1992
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Blasthole Stoping at Inco's Birchtree MineBy R. H. Brooks
Blasthole stoping methods were introduced at Birchtree Mine as an alternative to the original cut-and-fill and shrinkage stoping methods. The object was to take advantage of the ore structure and cond
Jan 1, 1979
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Blasthole Stoping At The Lac Shortt Mine, Corporation Falconbridge Copper ? Mine HistoryBy Louis P. Gignac
The Lac Shortt gold deposit is located in Northwestern Quebec, at some 115 km west of the Opemiska Division and 380 km northeast of the Lac Dufault Division, as shown on Figure 1. Falconbridge's
Jan 1, 1985
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Blasthole Stoping EvaluatedBy VlNTON H. CLARKE
Diamond-drill blasthole sloping has now been used for a long enough time to permit us to discuss fairly its problems from the ore-breaking angle and to attempt to peer into its future. To do this we h
Jan 1, 1949
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Blasthole Sub-Level Stoping At Kidd Creek MineBy Peter N. Blakey
The Kidd Creek orebody is a massive, base metal deposit with widths up to 600 feet and a strike length of 2,200 feet. The orebody dips eastwards at 70° to 80° and is amenable to sub-level open stoping
Jan 1, 1976
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BlastingBy Joseph S. Malesky
The discovery and development of explosives mark one of the most important findings in the history of civilization. Without explosives our vast economic enterprise concerning the mining of coal, coppe
Jan 1, 1981
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BlastingBy Joseph S. Malesky
The discovery and development of explosives mark one of the most important findings in the history of civilization. Without explosives our vast economic enterprise concerning the mining of coal, coppe
Jan 1, 1981
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BlastingBy Joseph S. Malesky
The discovery and development of explosives mark one of the most important findings in the history of civilization. Without explosives our vast economic enterprise concerning the mining of coal, coppe
Jan 1, 1981
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Blasting Results Compared Using Crusher Powder Consumption and Tonnage of Rock ProducedBy Ron Glowe
This paper shows the potential of a new computer model, using the Glowe-Tech (GT) Tonnage Analyzer program to compare drilling and blasting results. This model uses the crushers and conveyors as measu
Jan 1, 2005
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Blasting 1 Million Tons, 205 Meters from a TownBy Thierry Bernard, Guy Gagnon
Blasting at very close proximity to urban areas is typically a situation where both local communities and mining stakeholders get nervous. The context becomes logically even more tensed when the blast
Jan 1, 2014
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Blasting a Cavern Using Bulk Emulsion ExplosivesThe Elgas Underground Storage Facility at Port Botany, Sydney, is the first purpose-built cavern of its kind in Australia and allows large capacity, safe and environmentally benign storage of Liquefie
Jan 1, 1999
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Blasting a Diversion Tunnel through the Abutment of a "Meta-Stable" DamBy Jennifer Williams, Donald J. Berger
Originally built between 1913 and 1916, the Ashton Dam & Hydroelectric Facility has experienced various seepage and piping incidents since completion. Ashton Dam is located within 15 miles (24 km) of
Jan 1, 2014
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Blasting Abrasives In The United States MarketBy G. T. Austin
Every year the United States consumes millions of dollars worth of abrasive materials as blasting media. Entrained in either a gas or liquid stream or propelled by paddles or wheels, they are directed
Jan 1, 1994
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Blasting and Comminution Choices for the Management of the Mining BusinessBy Alexandre Passos, Giorgio De Tomi, Tatiane Marin, Dennis Cremonese, Jacopo Seccatore
"In the mining industry, rock excavation is the first phase of the comminution process. Downstreamoperations such as secondary breaking, crushing and milling terminate the process, reducing the size o
Jan 1, 2016
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Blasting and Ethics – Why Should I Care?By Jim Daly
The word “Enron” has taken on a totally different meaning since its leaders were caught juggling the books, President Clinton’s reputation was destroyed not by what he did but by how he tried to cover
Jan 1, 2007
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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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Blasting and preconditioning modelling in underground cave mines under high stress conditionsBy J. S. Contreras, E. Córdova, I. Gottreux, A. Anani, A. Ferrada
Cave mining is an underground mass mining technique. The largest projects, which are known as ‘super caves’, produce hundreds of thousands of tons of ore per day, which involves large footprints with
Feb 2, 2021
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Blasting Approaches to Increase Mine Productivity and Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Surface Coal MiningBy T Goswami, G Brent
In response to concerns over greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and an imposed cost in some jurisdictions, many mining houses have committed to reductions in their GHG emissions. However, mining faces par
Aug 24, 2015
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Blasting Claims 101: An Introduction to the Defense of ClaimsBy Joshua A. Bennett
"Lawsuits where owners allege their property has been damaged by nearby blasting routinely costblasting companies, explosives engineers, and others in the field both time and money. When ownersfeel th
Jan 1, 2016
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Blasting Conditions Couldn't be WorseBy John Atkinson, Steve Repola
This paper will describe two blasting plans that have been developed for American Aggregates' Marble Cliff Quarry located near Columbus, Ohio. Two different limestone formations are mined on different
Jan 1, 1993