Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
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
-
Relating Explosives Sensitivity Laboratory Results to Field Tests
By R R. Vendebeek
The continuing evolution of explosives has most recently introduced emulsion explosives and heavy ANFO's to the market place. An explosives engineer has a multiplicity of explosives to choose from: dy
Jan 1, 1987
-
Public Relations: A Practical Means to Control Blasting Complaints
By I E. "Chip" Harris, G Alan Foster
Whilst a great deal of published data exists as to safe ground vibration and air blast levels which result from blasting little documented research has been carried out to determine how and why human
Jan 1, 1977
-
Research on Program Design for Control Blasting of Reinforced Concrete Frame Structures
By Wang Hao
"Demolition of reinforced concrete frame structures in building crowded cities is a hardproblem in control blasting. Any mistakes, e.g. wrong toppling direction of multi-storeybuilding or incompleted
Jan 1, 1993
-
Journal: Blastserve A Discussion Forum for ISEE Members (8c2fadf8-c3ea-4d52-bed4-9f74e7ae96c9)
Lightning Strikes on Vehicles Transporting Explosives The police in one of the countries in which we operate has asked about the consequences of a lightning strike on a vehicle (box van) carrying deto
Jan 1, 2011
-
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
-
Potential Limits for Regulation of Environmental Effects of Blasting
By Gerald R. Coonan
Early in the open session of the 1979 SEE Fifth Conference panel discussion, someone asked a question of the panel concerning the future intent of the Office of Surface Mining and the regulatory limit
Jan 1, 1979
-
Remote Vibration Monitoring as Historic Structions
By 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
-
The Stability of Slopes Subjected to Blasting Vibration-Assessment and Application in Hong Kong
By R Keller, R Law
In the rush to beat the clock before the handover of Hong Kong back to China in June of 1997, an unprecedented amount of infrastructure work is being undertaken at a breakneck pace. In the middle of t
Jan 1, 1996
-
The Effects of Stemming Consist on Retention in Blastholes
By Jim Davis, Calvin J. Konya
The methods used to confine the gases within a borehole can influence the amount of useful energy obtained from the explosive charge. Improper confinement not only wastes energy and raises cost but al
Jan 1, 1978
-
Safety of Ammonium Nitrate
By Erik Nygaard
Ammonium nitrate (AN) is the main ingredient in most industrial explosives, but it is estimated that as much as 80-90% of the global annual production is used as fertilizer [14, 25]. Over the last yea
Jan 1, 2006
-
Hoover Dam Project
By Joe Strobbe, Kevin Joe
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation awarded PCL Civil Constructors the project to build a new visitor's center and parking lot structure at the Hoover Dam. The excavations for these structures present many
Jan 1, 1993
-
Capture of a Groundwater Contamination Plume in Fractured Bedrock by an Artificially Produced Fracture Zone Created Through Controlled Blasting
By Robert J. Nothnagle, Kristen Franz Begor, Rodney W. Sutch
Recovery of contaminated groundwater in a fractured bedrock system presents some unique problems. Typically, the most common problem occurs from the inability to adequately characterize the discrete f
Jan 1, 1988
-
Blasting Research to Enhance Permeability for In Situ Mining
By Mark S. Stagg, Rolfe E. Otterness, Stephen Rholl
The Bureau of Mines is engaged in research to develop and test high explosive fracturing and rubblization techniques that will enhance ore body permeability and thus increase recovery during in situ m
Jan 1, 1991
-
The Largest Chemical Explosion on the Australian Continent: The Ord River Project
This case history refers to the detonation of the two largest chemical explosions on the Australian continent. An important element of feasibility studies and construction guidance included prediction
Jan 1, 1995
-
Fragmentation and Throw due to Blasting – Role of Initiation Systems
By K. Ram Chandar, Vedala Rama Sastry
Fragmentation and muck pile profile together play an important role in optimizing the excavation costs for given geo-mining conditions. Initiation system is one of the vital parameters influencing the
Jan 1, 2008
-
Observations on the Performance of Concrete at High Stress Levels from Blasting
This paper presents a brief discussion of three case histories to illustrate several aspects of the question of blasting in or immediately adjacent to concrete. The results demonstrate a need to make
Jan 1, 1980
-
Safety Considerations when Using Short Lead, (5 cm), Magnadet Detonators
By Lon D. Santis
This paper reports on an evaluation of the safety characteristics of short lead, 5 centimeter (cm), Magnadet1 detonators. The Magnadet initiation system uses magnetic induction principles to transfer
Jan 1, 1992
-
A New Tool for Managing Risk Associated with Commercial Explosives Operations
By Lon Santis, David Leidel, John Tatom, Meredith Hardwick
This paper describes the development and methodology of the Institute of Makers of Explosives’ Safety Analysis for Risk (IMESAFR), a risk analysis software program for commercial explosives operations
Jan 1, 2007
-
Toxic Fumes on the Rocks
By Michael S. Wieland
Toxic fume concentrations from industrial mining explosives depend somewhat upon the type of rock (or other strata) confinement. Though traditional detonation theory disregards this influence, the wor
Jan 1, 2005