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Energy and the Environment - the Nature of the ProblemBy Earl Cook
With all our power and hope, we are part of the natural system and subject to its laws. As Francis Bacon pointed out long ago, we must understand those laws and "obey" them if we wish to "conquer natu
Jan 1, 1979
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Journal; Safety Talk How Do We Work Safely? Practice, Practice, Practice.By Willard Pierce
Very few people will consciously decide to do an unsafe act. With that said, how many of us unconsciously put ourselves in harms way, sometimes even on a daily basis? Complacency on the job may have v
Jan 1, 2006
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Organization - Key to SuccessBy Sandra K. Penttinen
A difficult blasting project can go very smoothly when every precaution is taken prior to and during the blasting procedures. These precautions include conducting careful preblast condition surveys of
Jan 1, 1994
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Utilization of Pre-split to Dewater a CutBy Monica Stuckert
Field studies were made at an Appalachia coal stripping operation to evaluate the differences in cost and performance between blast casting with pre-split dewatering versus conventional coal overburde
Jan 1, 1985
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Emulsion Powder ExplosivesBy Jin Jingzhi, Wang Xuguang, Guan Li, Li Jianjin
Emulsion explosives are gaining a wider and wider commercial market and are displacing other composite slurry technologies. However, the grease-like state and essential thermodynamic instability of em
Jan 1, 1997
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Optimum Design Features of Controlled Trajectory Blasting (CTB)By T N. Hagan
Where explosion energy moves rock from the in-situ to its desired location without considerable assistance from digging and/or hauling equipment, good fragmentation is of minor importance. Maximum dis
Jan 1, 1979
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Screen Analysis of Full-Scale Production BlastsBy R E. Otterness, M S. Stagg
The U. S. Bureau of Mines conducted 22 full-scale blasts to determine the effects of delay and explosive type on fragmentation. The shots were conducted over a period of 7 years in three limestone qua
Jan 1, 1995
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Discovery, Analysis, and Elimination of Instantaneous Misfires in Underground Production Blasts (2000 International Society of Explosives Engineers)By Norman Disley, David B. Counter, Lionel Hebert
Misfires in underground and surface production blasts can be costly. Costs can arise from loss of resource, production interruptions, having to redrill or otherwise refire the blast (a hazardous proce
Jan 1, 1996
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Results of Blasting in Close Proximity to Water Wells at the Sleeper MineBy Roy Rose, Bruce Bowles, Wesley L. Bender
Numerous large diameter water wells are used to dewater the pit at the Sleeper Mine. Occasionally, a well will be located inside the boundaries of a blast. Although one might expect that wells so loca
Jan 1, 1991
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Remote Vibration Monitoring as Historic StructionsBy Tom Donnelly, Roger C. Ilsley
Remote telecommunications seismographs were used to monitor blast vibrations at two historic structures in Cedarburg, Wisconsin during adjacent sewer line construction. The purpose of the vibration mo
Jan 1, 1991
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Investigation of the Seismic Effects of Blasting in HungaryBy F Hunyadi
The seismic effects resulting from blasting are still a problem today although a great deal of research has been conducted in this field. A great amount of data defining the seismic effects can be col
Jan 1, 1975
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Development of Low Density Explosives with Wall Control ApplicationsBy C Hunter, K Fedak, J P. Todoeschuck
"Perimeter wall control has a direct effect on the overall grade of any underground miningoperation. Mine management at INCO's Birchtree Mine in Thompson, Manitoba requiresmaximum perimeter wall contr
Jan 1, 1993
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Rock Mass Identification Prior To Blasting: Reasons And MethodBy Anne Charline Sauvage
Blast designers and blasters need to know the rock mass influence on blast to increase explosive effi-ciency and to optimize costs, but also to succeed in limiting blast emissions (vibration, overpres
Jan 1, 2013
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Fisheries Impacts of Underwater Explosives Used to Salvage Oil and Gas Platforms in the Gulf of MexicoBy Gregg R. Gitschlag
There are more than 4,000 oil and gas structures present in the U. S. Gulf of Mexico. Approximately 100 structure removals occur each year and 66% of these are removed with explosives. From 1993-1995
Jan 1, 1997
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Commercial Reformulation, an Economic and Environmentally Benign Means of Using Explosives and Solid PropellantsThe reformulation of military explosives and solid propellants into commercial explosives offers a unique solution to the problem of disposing of high energy materials with essentially zero environmen
Jan 1, 1995
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Dynamic Photoelastic Experiment on the Fracture Caused by a BlastingBy Yuji: Wada Ogata, Kunihisa Katsuyama
It is well known that a compressed stress wave reflects at the free face, it propagates to the backward as a tensile stress wave, and cracks grow when the tensile stress becomes the dynamic tensile st
Jan 1, 1993
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Model Rock Blasting Measures Effect of Delays and Hole Patterns on Rock FragmentationBy J W. Edl, F C. Wu
In instrumented model rock blasting experiments in granite blocks, best fragmentation results were obtained when delays between holes were 1 to 2 milliseconds per ft. of burden and when a rectangular
Jan 1, 1975
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Direct Measurement of "Borehole" Pressure of ExplosivesBy Philip Barnhard, Lyman G. Bahr
By recording the arrival time of a pipe wall at evenly spaced intervals in a plane perpendicular to the pipe axis, application of the equations of motion permits calculation of the pressure of the exp
Jan 1, 1981
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The Computer Model of Single Hole, Reduced Scale Bench Blast FragmentationBy Mark S. Stagg, Steven V. Crum
The Bureau of Mines is conducting research to develop methods to control fragmentation and improve productivity in surface mine blasting. As part of this research, PRONT02D, a two-dimensional finite e
Jan 1, 1989
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Preparation - The Key to a Good Legal DefenseBy G Alan Foster
The presence of approximately 600,000 attorneys in the U.S.A. and the determination by the courts that blasting is considered an 'ultra hazardous' activity makes every practical blaster aware that at
Jan 1, 1982