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Stratablasttm - A New Mining MethodBy T Goswami
The conventional practice in open cut coal strip mining has been to blast the overburden or coal layers in separate blast events. This is done in order to maximise the benefits from throw blasting and
Jan 1, 2006
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Drill Monitoring and GPS Developments and their Impact on the Drill to Mill ProcessBy John Vynne
Too often, a mine’s operations, including drilling, blasting, loading, hauling, crushing, processing, etc., are considered independent steps, rather then a continuous process. In fact, these are inter
Jan 1, 2000
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Journal: 100 Years / FIG. 2. Bridge wrecked by material from blast near Chattanooga, TennBy Robert Hopler
A blast caused the destruction of a bridge and loaded freight train and the death of three men, near Chattanooga, Tenn., on May 16, 1907. The blast and its disastrous effect has been described by Mr.
Jan 1, 2008
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Blasting and Groundwater Contamination – Case StudyBy James Tarr, Matthew Eichler, Brent Tardif
ANFO was being used as one of the blasting agents on a construction site in New England. Groundwater was encountered in numerous blast holes. The blasting contractor was employing typical explosives l
Jan 1, 2003
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Ore Waste and Dilution Studies of Surface Mineral Blasting with 3D Distinct Element Heave ModelsBy Stewart A. Silling, Dale S. Preece
The two key results of rock blasting are fragmentation and movement of geomaterials. Movement/flow of the blasted rock is often referred to as heave. Modeling the movement of full scale blasting is no
Jan 1, 2016
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Quality Control of Bulk Explosive Products to Minimize the Risk of FumesBy Alastair Torrance, Mitchell Nipperess, Andrew Olsson, Italo Onederra, Gary Cavanough
Components of bulk explosive products include ammonium nitrate, water, fuel, stabilizers, and calcium nitrate. The physical attributes include prill/emulsion ratio, density, and viscosity and in the c
Jan 1, 2015
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Simple Models for Gas Flow and Burden Movement During BlastingBy Italo Onederra, Jason Furtney, Ewan Sellers
The detonation reactions occurring during rock blasting result in high pressure gas phase products from the condensed explosives typically used in mining applications. After detonation and the initial
Jan 1, 2012
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Wall Control Blasting Practices at Kisladag Gold MineBy Ekin Güngor, Berkant Ozdemir, Erkan Bayrak, Serdar Ergün, Sedat Esen
"This paper presents the final wall blasting practices at Eldorado Kisladag Gold Mine in Turkey. Benchmark and improved wall control designs were explained in detail. Kisladag Mine has been implementi
Jan 1, 2017
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A Method to Calculate the Dynamic Strain Tensor from Blast Vibration Records - Theory and Measurement Error AnalysisBy Ruilin Yang
"Blast vibrations are essentially a strain/stress wave propagating in rock or structures inthe vicinity of a blast. However, blast vibration has always been quantified in terms ofpeak particle velocit
Jan 1, 2012
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Top Hammer Hydraulic Drilling Pushing the Practitioners' EnvelopeBy William Hissem
When we look out on our business landscape today, the words higher, faster, fdwther come to mind. Compliance issues, business integration, increasing production and profitability demands are convergin
Jan 1, 2000
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Engineering Geophysics for the Mining and Construction IndustriesBy Douglas Rudenko
Most engineers, mine operators, or contractors acknowledge the importance of having accurate subsurface information in order to plan a project or solve a problem. Conventional methods of exploring the
Jan 1, 1998
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Preparing a Written Blast PlanBy David Ziegler
Rough sketches, field notes, an on-site conference or a phone call may no longer suffice to establish your blast plan at a job site. More and more, general contractors, site supervisors, owner re p re
Jan 1, 2004
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Impact Mine Blasting on the Environment of Quarry Operation (Neighbou Perception and Operator Dutie)By G. Gomez Ciments-Calcia
The sources of complaints by neighbours of the operating quarry are due to the 3 following causes : - Impulsional noises or air hoch wawes – Vibrations - D u s t How a blasting in a quarry operation i
Jan 1, 2002
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Civil Tunnelling with Electronic Blasting Systems - Early Experience in KoreaBy Dave Kay, Young-Suk Song
To meet the needs of South Korea's rapidly expanding economy, a large number of infrastructure projects are under way to improve transportation efficiency within the nation. These projects include hig
Jan 1, 2005
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The Effect of Calculated Explosive Energy Output on Blast DesignBy P D. Kasbanis, Lyall Workman
"The energy output of an explosive is typically calculated using an equation of state and computerapplications. Results are reported as weight and bulk strength, either in absolute terms or relative t
Jan 1, 1996
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Analytical High-Speed Photography to Evaluate Air Decks, Stemming Retention and Gas Confinement in Presplitting, Reclamation and Gross Notion ApplicationsBy Mark E. Hammele
A number of new thoughts have recently emerged concerning the role of air decks, stemming, gas confinement and gross motion in specific blasting environments and applications. Field research in full-s
Jan 1, 1989
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Trench Blasting in Close Proximity to Existing Utilities in Ultra Metamorphic RockBy Tom Treleaven, Andrew Williams
The town of Greenwich, CT, an exclusive suburb of New York City awarded several contracts for the installation of sanitary sewer in the North Mianus section of town. The Valley Road section was the mo
Jan 1, 2004
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Using New Radio Frequency Identification to Improve Scheduling and System Management of Rock Excavation and TransportBy Luis Valentim, Terry Cousins
The goal of a mine is to produce ore at the lowest possible cost with due regard to safety of pemonnel and equipment. The mining process consists of a number of discrete operations such as planning, d
Jan 1, 1998
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Selection of Powder Factor in Large Diameter Blastholes (9dd28d4c-e692-46ff-9e71-b2043e0b42a0)By Jack Eloranta
This paper documents the relationship between material handling and processing coete compared to blasting cost. The old adage, "The cheapest crushing is done in the pit", appears accurate in this c!as
Jan 1, 1995
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Surface Instabilities from Buried ExplosionsBy Daniel P. Lathrop, Leslie C. Taylor, William L. Fourney
Except when the target is on the surface, e.g. a tank track, the most important loading mechanism from a buried charge on a target above it is the impact of soil propelled at the target by the expandi
Jan 1, 2009