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Journal: 100 Years / The Engineering And Mining Journal New York August 10, 1907 Ground Breaking In The Joplin District Q786 Holes Are Drilled With Air Drills And Squibbed Before Charging. About 1 Pound Of Dynamite Is Required Per Ton Of Rock BrokenBy Doss Brittain
The term ground breaking is taken to include the process of so loosening the ground as to enable it to be readily loaded into buckets or cars and hoisted from the shaft or drift. In the Joplin distric
Jan 1, 2008
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What Broke the Burden? Improving our Understanding of Burden Breakout.By Mauritz Kotze, Jason Furtney, Ewan Sellers, Sandy Etchells, Tom Szendrei
The development of a simple model for gas flow and burden movement has driven the need to improve our understanding of burden breakage mechanisms for single hole blasts and the interaction between mul
Jan 1, 2013
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Blast Design for Optimizing Fragmentation While Controlling Frequency of Ground VibrationBy Andrew P. Ritter, Douglas A. Anderson, Stephen R. Winzer
We have adopted a unified approach to blast design. Based on earlier research, we chose minimum relief of 3.4 ms/ft between holes in a row and 8.6 ms/ft between echelons to produce good fragmentation.
Jan 1, 1982
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Blasting For A Lokotrack SystemBy Roger L. Keller
Cautious, productive blasting is employed in the adaptation of a mobile crushing system extending into a highway through cut. In Hong Kong's final chapter of infrastructure development in preparation
Jan 1, 1998
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A New Way of Looking at Risk and QD ComplianceBy Lon Santis, Michael Swisdak, John Tatom
The Institute of Makers of Explosives (IME) and A-P-T Research, Inc. (APT) have developed a quantitative risk assessment tool called IMESAFR (IME Safety Analysis for Risk) for managing risk from vario
Jan 1, 2013
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Examination and Comparison of Shock Wave Characteristics in Open-Air Arena Test vs. Shock Tunnel ConfinementBy D J. McLane, J T. Rathbun, B T. Lusk
The dynamics of explosive detonations are understood, however recreating a real-world, full scale scenario is costly. The use of a shock-tunnel allows testing to be done on a smaller scale, with the s
Jan 1, 2013
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Blast Design and Mill Performance – A Case HistoryBy Raj K. Rajamani, Solomon A. Tucker, Michael K. McCarter
"In a study aimed at exploring possible improvements in operating performance at an Open Pit Copper (OPC) mine in the western U.S., the impact of blast energy changes on crushing performance was evalu
Jan 1, 2017
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Underwater Explosions: Natural Resource Concerns, Uncertainty of Effects, and Data NeedsBy Marion Smith, Thomas M. Keevin, Dennis G. Wright, Gregory L. Hempen, Joel B. Gaspin, Thomas L. Linton, Gregg R. Gitschlag
"A Natural Resources Working Group, within the International Society of Explosives Engineers, reviewed published environmental effects data, identified data gaps, and prioritized data collection needs
Jan 1, 1999
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A Work Area Monitor (WAM) to protect Blast Crews from Rock FallsBy David Scutt, David Noon
Blast crews are exposed to a number of major hazards including explosives and chemicals, ground conditions, machinery, unique work environments and specific blasting hazards such as fly rock and misfi
Jan 1, 2011
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Journal: 100 Years / A PRIMER ON EXPLOSIVES FOR COAL MINERS Bulletin 17 by Charles E. Munroe & Clarence Hall U.S. Bureau of Mines, Washington, D.C.By Robert Hopler
Of the common causes of the larger mine accidents, such as falls of roof and coal, gas and dust explosions, mine fires, and the misuse of explosives, all of which are often closely related, each must
Jan 1, 2012
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Advanced techniques using microscopy to quickly assess emulsion quality and stability.By G. Cavanough, A. Torrance
Emulsions have been developed for over forty years to become the most common water-resistant explosives used in the mining industry. An emulsion is a common commodity, with many examples in our day to
Jan 1, 2024
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Effect of Blasting Vibrations from Deck Blasts on Pit Wall Stability (Blasting and Fragmentation Vol. 11, No. 1, 2017)By B Mohanty, A Siamaki, K Esmaeili
Large scale open pit mining and quarrying operations dictate safe and reliable pit wall stability. The current approach of employing the particle velocity-scaled charge distance approach to estimate a
Jan 1, 2017
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Dynamic Response of Buried Oil Pipeline Caused by Tunneling BlastingBy Zheng Shuangying
The vibration effect of the buried oil pipeline caused by tunneling blasting affects the pipeline safe transportation, tunnel construction schedule and its construction cost. The dynamic response char
Jan 1, 2015
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Fingerprint Verification For Control Of Electronic Blast InitiationBy Ron Stewart, Richard Youmaran, Andy Adler
In the current context of heightened concerns with explosives security, there is significant interest in technological controls to improve security. It is important to be able to control what is fired
Jan 1, 2007
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Reducing Coal Damage And Loss With A New Blasting TechnologyBy Tapan Goswami, Lloyd Hain, Geoff Brent
For many years Ramp 24 at Ensham mine in Queensland, Australia has suffered substantial coal loss and damage due to the fragile nature of the coal and problematic geological conditions, which have pro
Jan 1, 2008
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Rock Slope Remediation on the Pennsylvania TurnpikeBy Ron Woolf, Corry Goumans
With increasing traffic volumes experienced thro u g hout North America, a common goal for Highway officials is to keep traffic flowing as much as possible and to keep disruptions to the flow to a min
Jan 1, 2003
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Determination of the Precise Origins of Air Overpressure Generated from Production Blasts at Melton Ross QuarryBy C E. Johnson, S Hosein
Previous researchers have put forward two different theories as to the origin of air overpressure from quarry blasting. In 1980, Siskind et al postulated that the initial face movement gave rise to th
Jan 1, 2017
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The Effect of Selected Blasting Parameters on the Detonation Velocity of Bulk Emulsion ExplosivesBy Piotr Mertuszka
Many years of research on more effective and safer explosives have led to the development of emulsion explosives. They are the second most commonly used group of explosives worldwide, primarily becaus
Jan 26, 2026
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Death of a Coal ShovelBy Roger G. Sprague
With the passing of time, changing marketplaces and years of hard service, coupled with new machines, increased productivity, rapidly improving technology, equipment which used to be the latest in mod
Jan 1, 1998
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Optimization of Equipment Exclusion Zones in Mining Blasting Processes Through Predictive Analysis and Field ValidationBy Orica Peru, Pedro Lozada
Proper management of exclusion zones in blasting operations is essential to ensure safety without compromising operational efficiency. In Peru, mining regulations establish minimum exclusion distances
Jan 26, 2026