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Next Generation Laser Surveying Systems! Blast Design and Analysis SoftwareBy Steve Colbum
LTl’s MapStar LPS (laser positioning system) utilize both tripod mounted and hand held reflectorless distance meters. These are eye safe, easy-to-use, and specifically designed to endure the harsh env
Jan 1, 2000
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High-wall Control at Anglo Gold Ashanti, Navachab MineBy Charles Pretorius, Henk Ludik
Navachab Mine experiences difficulties with pit wall stability in certain areas of the mine. The main reason for the instability is the fact that the geology comprises many joints and faults. Blasting
Jan 1, 2006
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Lothological Recognition Based on Monitored Drilling Performance ParametersBy Jonathan Peck, Doug Pollitt, Malcolm Scoble
Over the past 5 years the Department of Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, McGill University, has been involved in the performance monitoring of both percussive and rotary drills. Studies conducted
Jan 1, 1991
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The SMI, New Easy-To-Use Electronic Initiation SystemBy Peter Duniam, Stephen John Brace
2000 HIGH-TECH SEMINAR Blasting Technology, Instrumentation and Explosives Applications Orlando,Florida,USA July24-27,200O. Objectives:- After completing this session 1. Explain safety issues 2. Do si
Jan 1, 2000
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Crystal Falls Dam Demolition and Protection Techniques Using an Air CurtainBy Alex Chapman, Cam Thomas, Bryan Karney
"During the early summer of 1989, Ontario Hydro removed a concrete portion of the North Channel Dam at Crystal Falls Generating Station by blasting and excavating in marine conditions. Because of the
Jan 1, 1992
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Subdrill – The Underutilised Blasting ParameterBy Stephen Mansfield
In metalliferous mining operations, subdrill is that portion of the blast hole that is drilled below the target grade elevation, and in most cases loaded with explosives. Its primary aim is to enable
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The Actual Cost of Hole Deviation to the Mining Industry - A case Study at Nkana Division of the Former Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines LimitedBy Sam Kangwa, Thomson Sinkala
In the mining industry, drilling accuracy has a significant effect on the economy of operations. In this paper, results from the Nkana Division of the former Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines are prese
Jan 1, 2004
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Application and Economics of Overburden Casting: Can it Work for You?By Conny Postupack
To make money in mining coal you have to sell it for a lot more than it cost you to get it out of the ground. And yet, every year it cost us more and more to stay inbusiness, while the price we get fo
Jan 1, 1990
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The Field Application of a Low -Cost Shock SensorBy Rob Farnfield, Charlie Adhock
The measurement of near-field shock has always been an attractive proposition for those working in the field of explosive and blast performance. The most commonly employed technique involves the use o
Jan 1, 2005
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Analysis of Sympathetic Detonation in Detonating CordBy Abigail Styer, Paul Holmgren, Josh Calnan
Detonating cord is a staple of the explosives industry, used widely in the civil and defense industries. Detonating cord is a thin, flexible plastic tube filled with pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN
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Estimation of Rock Fragmentation in Bench Blasting Using Numerical SimulationBy Sang Ho Cho, Masaji Kato, Masaaki Yamamoto, Masaaki Nishi, Katsuhiko Kaneko
This paper presents a numerical simulation method to predict rock fragmentation and to verify a fracture mechanism by bench blasting. The rock fragmentation, which has been used as a means of the inde
Jan 1, 2002
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Journal: Big Sky and Beyond Explosives, Avalanches and RegulationsBy Mike Boissonneault
It was three years ago when the “storm of the century” had taken a firm grip over the Pacific West Coast and inland areas. At the Big Sky ski resort in Montana on Christmas morning two ski patrollers
Jan 1, 2001
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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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Sequence of Events During a BlastBy Patrice Favreau, R. F. Ph. D. Professor Emeritus Favreau
After Nobel invented dynamite, blasts were carried out by trial and error, without the use of equations based on the fundamental principles of Chemistry and Physics, although everyone accepted that sh
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Concepts for Better BlastingBy William Reisz
Over the years as surface mining operations have become more sophisticated, angle drilling has become a more popular blast design technique, especially in areas where overburden and stripping ratios h
Jan 1, 2002
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The Effect of Confinement on Ground Vibration AmplitudeBy Jay Rodgers
There has been a longstanding acceptance that burden plays a major role in the magnitude of ground vibration amplitudes generated from surface blasting. Much of the data that this belief is based upon
Jan 1, 2003
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Transition of the Seismograph from a Tool of Litigation to a Tool of Production EfficiencyBy David S. Bowling
The ER-300 Series White Recorders were developed to provide on economical, yet invaluable instrument for those who desire permanent recordings of such data OS displacement, vibration, concussion (air
Jan 1, 1990
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Response of Manufactured Houses to Blast VibrationsBy Michael Mann
Two house trailers and a modem modular house, all pillar-supported with cantilevered perimeters, were monitored for structural response to vibrations from surface coal mine blasts. Due to the large bl
Jan 1, 2000
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New Lightweight Dragline BucketsBy Rowan A' Murry Karstel
One way to ensure dragline productivity is by Increasing the size of the dragline bucket. In August 1994, Optimum Colliery in conjunction with Van Reenen Steel, Northwest Applied Technology, SSAB of S
Jan 1, 1998
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Blasting 1 Million Tons, 205 Meters from a TownBy Thierry Bernard, Guy Gagnon
Blasting at very close proximity to urban areas is typically a situation where both local communities and mining stakeholders get nervous. The context becomes logically even more tensed when the blast
Jan 1, 2014