RI 3646 Stemming in Metal Mines - Progress Report 4 - Firing through Stemming

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Wing G. Agnew John A. Johnson McHenry Mosier
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
5
File Size:
289 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1942

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION AND CONCLUSIONSThe first three reports of investigations 5/ in this series, pertaining to the investigation of stemming at the Mount Weather Testing Adit dealt with the dust produced by blasting, the effect of stemming on gases generated by blasting, and the relative advantages and disadvantages of different types of stemming and no stemming when used with 60-percent ammonia gelatin dynamite.This report covers an investigation of the length of stemming material through which a primer will fire and detonate a charge of dynamite, such as a missed hole.The practice of drilling a new hole a foot from a missed hole to blast out the missed hole should be prohibited. It is dangerous, as is evidenced by the number of miners killed through drilling into missed holes. It is even more hazardous in a mine on a multiple-shift basis, in which the same miners do not drill succeeding rounds."
Citation

APA: Wing G. Agnew John A. Johnson McHenry Mosier  (1942)  RI 3646 Stemming in Metal Mines - Progress Report 4 - Firing through Stemming

MLA: Wing G. Agnew John A. Johnson McHenry Mosier RI 3646 Stemming in Metal Mines - Progress Report 4 - Firing through Stemming. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1942.

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