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Part A: Structural Response from Surface Coal Mine Blasting on a Residential Structure; Part B: House Response from Blast-Induced Low Frequency Ground Vibrations and Inspections for Related Interior CrackingBy John H. Weigand, Stephen V. Crum
"VIBRONICS, INC. instrumented and monitored a residential structure for response to,blasting at aMidwestern surface coal operation. The residence was owned by the mining company and was extremely clos
Jan 1, 1998
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"Suppression of Dust Generation during Blast Demolition of ConcreteColumns"By Chulgi Suk, Hoon Park, Hyonsoo Kim, Hakman Kim, Sangho Cho
Dust emission from blast demolition and other construction activities can be a nuisance; it is widely recognized that fine particles less than 10 µm in equivalent diameter (called PM10) may cause heal
Jan 1, 2016
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Optimizing the Initiation Position of Geophysical Exploration ChargesBy E. McCullough, D. Preece, M. Ortel
Geophysical explosive charges are used in mineral resource exploration. They are detonated subsurface and radiate sonic waves into ground monitors, which detect the vibration waves and their interacti
Jan 1, 2013
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Expansion of the Panama CanalBy Tom Treleaven
The widening of the Panama Canal to approximately 130 feet (40 m) for its entire length began just a few years ago. The original expansion program was slated for completion in 18 to 20 years, but has
Jan 1, 1997
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The Laws Governing BlastingBy Scott Orenstein
Construction blasting has allegedly been the cause of property damage in the following situations: (1) When the detonation of the shot hurls rock and debris into the air that causes property damage up
Jan 1, 2004
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The Application of Electronic Detonators to Improve Blast Vibration Predictions at Limestone QuarriesBy R. Farnfield, W. Birch
Arguably, some of the most restrictive statutory blast vibration requirements attached to mineral extraction operations can be found in the United Kingdom. Such limitations are, as a rule for the UK,
Jan 1, 2006
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Advanced Blast Modeling for Mining Steeply Dipping Coal SeamsBy Dan L'Heureux, Joe Haid, Stephen H. Chung
Most coal deposits in Western Canada involve steeply dipping multiple seams. An efficient way to recover coal seams would be to drill through the seams and blast both the overlying and underlying wast
Jan 1, 1998
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Discovery, Analysis, and Elimination of Instantaneous Misfires in Underground Production BlastsBy 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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Expan - Ammonium Nitrate Prill for Blasting, Technical Aspects and ApplicationsBy Tjaar A. Louw, Albert P. Van Niekerk, Johannes J. Louw, Attie J. Goosen
Unlike molecular high explosives, commercial explosives based on ammonium nitrate do not detonate ideally according to the theoretical model for steady state, one-dimensional detonation. One of the re
Jan 1, 1997
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Mini-Bench Blasting Applicability at the Excavation for Foundation in SettlementBy Sadettin Bagdatli, Ali Kahriman, Umit Ozer, Alper Celtikci, Yucel Karakus
Due to population growth and rapid urbanization in Turkey, the need for the construction of residential units, transportation and infrastructure facilities has become increasingly more pressing. Since
Jan 1, 2014
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Development of a Wireless Sensor Network for Blast Monitoring and Slope StabilityBy Johnny Lyons-Baral, John Kemeny, Don Kraemer
Ground vibrations from blasting can result in the degradation and failure of rock and soil exposures, as well as damaging neighboring houses and buildings. At the same time, vibration provides an oppo
Jan 1, 2014
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Concepts and Case Study for Regular Rhythmic Timing and SequenceBy Neal Lee, Braden T. Lusk, Jhon Silva-Castro, Patrick J. Jenks
"Timing and charge sequence are very important for optimized blast design. Traditional nonelectricinitiation systems have moved the industry toward a system of delays consisting of hole-to-hole androw
Jan 1, 2016
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Measuring Underground Face Drilling and BlastingBy Thomas Barkley
Recent developments in hardware and software have made accurate measurement of Underground Face (Development) Drilling a reality. New and compact laser profiling equipment makes it possible to measure
Jan 1, 2003
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Lightning Detection and Warning SystemsBy William H. Highlands
Lightning is a natural phenomenon which poses a potential hazard to people, structures, and equipment unless adequate protection is provided. The type of protection required is related to the nature a
Jan 1, 1989
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Understanding Toxic Fumes from Mining ExplosivesBy Michael S. Wieland
"Toxic fumes cause fatal andnonfatal incidents in underground mining, where the working environment tends to trap the fumes, hindering the restoration of non-harmful conditions. Workers can underestim
Jan 1, 1997
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Field Application of Destructive Wave InterferenceBy Kurt Oakes, Paul Worsey, Braden Lusk, Tony Brasier, Scott Crabtree, Randy Wheeler
Theoretical description of destructive wave interference and the use of sacrifi cial holes is included and is supported by data collected at Springfi eld Underground. Finally, the process by which the
Jan 1, 2008
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Evaluating Delay Effects on Ground Vibrations with Simulated Vibration WaveformsBy Randall M. Wheeler
It is important to be able to quantify the effects of blast delay designs on vibration characteristics. White was the first company to develop commercially available software, called Alpha-Blast, for
Jan 1, 1994
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Critical Blast Design Parameters for Construction BlastingBy Tom Short
"Construction blasting covers a very extensive variety of explosive applications. I will discussseveral of these with you and then show slides from my collection, starting in 1956, which will betteril
Jan 1, 1991
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What a Gas: Blasting Under PressureBy Jerry Wallace
This project consisted of blasting for expansion of a major interstate natural gas transmission pipeline pump station. The pump station handled 400-500 million cubic feet (1 l- 14 million cubic meter
Jan 1, 1996
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Applied to a High Risk Case HistoryBy C Agreda
The Cushion Blasting Technique applied to solve the high risk case history represented by a 10,704 TM rock locate at 120 M from the hydroelectrical plants of 350 KV each, is described, analyzed and di
Jan 1, 2005