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  • ISEE
    Longer Delay Periods Reduce Rockfall Hazard at a Contour Mine

    By Virgil J. Stachura, Larry R. Fletcher

    The Bureau of Mines conducted a series of delayed blasting experiments at a West Virginia contour coal mine which resulted in smoother highwalls. The highwalls were smoother due to reduced overbreak a

    Jan 1, 1985

  • ISEE
    Pitfalls of Residential Blasting—Experiences of a Field Blaster

    By Chuck Kliche, Bill Clements

    This paper relates some of the experiences, good and bad, of blasting adjacent to residences of the primary author during his 15+ years of field blasting in the Northern Great Plains region. During th

    Jan 1, 2009

  • ISEE
    Fire Protection Provided by Detonator Containers

    By 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

  • ISEE
    Effective Construction Blasting Damage Control

    By Earl C. Hutchison, Gene Smith

    Extensive blasting was required to construct an underground tunnel for a 90 inch sewerage relief line. The tunnel and required excavation extended under an upper middle-class residential area in Atlan

    Jan 1, 1981

  • ISEE
    Weather and Blasting

    By Jack Eloranta

    Transmission of sound through the atmosphere is affected by local conditions. Anecdotal accounts of the sound of cannon fire traveling great distances go back to the Civil War. The Royal Society publi

    Jan 1, 2000

  • ISEE
    Controlling Backbreak with Proper Borehole Timing

    By Calvin J. Konya

    Backbreak behind the last row of boreholes can be a significant problem for blasting operations. Backbreak will interfere with the proper drilling and execution of the subsequent shot and can produce

    Jan 1, 1987

  • ISEE
    The Effect of Available Energy on Blast Design

    By Lyall Workman, P D. Katsabanis

    Energy released by the explosive is typically partitioned in brisance, heave and losses. The fact that energy released in the P-V expansion curve below a certain point is lost has resulted in the conc

    Jan 1, 1998

  • ISEE
    Safex International - Accident Prevention by Information Exchange

    By FM Murray

    SAFEX International is a global organisation with more than 85 members, all of whom are manufacturers of explosives. On joining each member signs a declaration saying that they are willing to exchange

    Jan 1, 2002

  • ISEE
    A non-toxic, safe and reliable non-primary-explosives detonator

    By Marco Antonio Falquete

    Conventional detonators and blasting caps make use, as igniters, of flame-shock-, andfriction-sensitive primary explosives, such as lead azide, lead styphnate, mercury fulminate, etc, most of them sev

    Jan 1, 2007

  • ISEE
    Detecting Cross-Hole Wave Interactions and Charge Malfunctions in Underground Shots

    By Michael S. Wieland

    This report discusses measurement techniques utilized in and trend results obtained from research on delay blasting malfunctions in underground coal shots at the U.S. Bureau of Mines. Charge malfuncti

    Jan 1, 1995

  • ISEE
    Fracture Control Blasting

    Fracture Control Blasting is an alternative to pre- and post-splitting or smooth wall blasting. It was developed at the University of Maryland as an attempt to overcome some of the disadvantages that

    Jan 1, 1984

  • ISEE
    Demolition of the Anaheim Bay Bridge

    By Lawrence W. Hallanger

    Anaheim Bay, located at Seal Beach, California, is the site of the Huntington Harbor development of waterfront homes and marine facilities. The main entrance to Anaheim Bay is a relatively narrow chan

    Jan 1, 1975

  • ISEE
    Rock Specific Breakage Energy Functions Derived from Lab Scale Blast Experiments

    By Peter Moser, Andreas Grasedieck

    In modern rock blasting it is becoming more and more important to achieve a certain specified fragmentation. This means that the rock particles formed as a result of the blast should conform to a desi

    Jan 1, 2004

  • ISEE
    Limited Void Volume Blasting

    By 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

  • ISEE
    New Development in Mechanized Uphole Charging of Explosives

    By Bengt Ljung

    Manual charging of long upward drilled holes in mines is a heavy and risky job today. Mechanization of this work has been requested for some time by miners, their supervisors, industrial safety organi

    Jan 1, 1978

  • ISEE
    A Method for Site-Specific Prediction and Control of Ground Vibration from Blasting

    By Andrew P. Ritter, James W. Reil, Douglas A. Anderson, Stephen R. Winzer

    We have developed a method for predicting and controlling ground vibration from blasting using a rigorous scientific approach. The method is based upon the superposition of seismic waveforms generated

    Jan 1, 1985

  • ISEE
    Drill and Blast Trial Planning During Drill-Mill Optimization Project

    By Tristan Worsey, John Henchion, Nathan Rouse, Yannick Lauras

    "This paper presents an approach used to plan and evaluate drill and blast trials for a mine that currently mechanically excavates in-situ rock. The document presents the approach used to plan the tri

    Jan 1, 2017

  • ISEE
    The Science of Blasting

    By Andrew Ritter, Victor I. Montenyohl, Stephen R. Winzer

    Thirty-seven open pit production blasting operations have been monitored using high-speed cameras running between 500 and 7000 frames per second. Analysis of the resulting films reveals irregularities

    Jan 1, 1979

  • ISEE
    Blasting: Strict Tort Liability or Negligence

    By Timothy Stark

    At present blasters are strictly liable under tort law for personal injury and property damage caused by ground vibrations and/or air overpressures. The application of strict tort liability to vibrati

    Jan 1, 2002

  • ISEE
    Effects of Firing Time Variations and Explosive Array Length on Seismic Wave Propagation from Quarry Blasts

    By Sharon K. Reamer, Klaus G. Hinzen, Brian W. Stump

    "This study investigates seismic wave propagation from two production shots in a limestone quarry. Our motivation is to investigate the efficiency of two superpositioning techniques. The production sh

    Jan 1, 1991