Uninvited chemical explosions

1950 ◽  
Vol 27 (11) ◽  
pp. 606 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. R. Tomlinson ◽  
L. F. Audrieth
Keyword(s):  
2000 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus-G. Hinzen ◽  
Stefan Pietsch

AbstractDiscrimination between quarry blasts and earthquakes has gained importance due to signature of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. In this context, large chemical explosions are significant. In the routine analysis of data from local seismograph networks, discrimination between smaller blasts and micro-earthquakes is not always clear. Many quarries are in operation and blasts far outnumber natural earthquakes in the highly industrialized northern Rhine area.We compiled a list of active quarries in the Northern Rhine Area and mapped their locations. We then created a database from a questionnaire sent out to all quarries on the list. From the 33% of questionnaires that were returned, we discerned some representative values for the main blasting parameters and explosive consumption. In the study area of 72,000 km2, approx. 21,000 blasts are fired per year (80 per working day). Most of the blasts (72%) have total explosive charges between 400 and 4500 kg. Shots with charges above 10 tons are rare (20-30 per year). Some 80% of the blasts are ripple-fired with a nominal firing time interval of 20 ms.Based on empirical amplitude vs. distance curves from vibration control measurements, a relation between maximum charge weight per delay time, L (kg), and a ‘quarry blast’ magnitude, MQB, is derived: MQB = 0.6·log10(L) + 0.131. Using this relation and extrapolating the database from the questionnaire shows that for magnitudes between 1 and 2, blasts occur 200–250 times more frequently than micro-earthquakes in the Northern Rhine area.


1990 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 430-449 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Menke ◽  
Arthur L. Lerner-Lam ◽  
Bruce Dubendorff ◽  
Javier Pacheco

Abstract Except for its very onset, the P wave of earthquakes and chemical explosions observed at two narrow-aperture arrays on hard-rock sites in the Adirondack Mountains have a nearly random polarization. The amount of energy on the vertical, radial, and transverse components is about equal over the frequency range 5 to 30 Hz, for the entire seismogram. The spatial coherence of the seismograms is approximately exp(−cfΔx), where c is in the range 0.4 to 0.7 km−1Hz−1, f is frequency and Δx is the distance between array elements. Vertical, radial, and transverse components were quite coherent over the aperture of the array, indicating that the transverse motion of the compressional wave is a property of relatively large (106 m3) volumes of rock, and not just an anomaly caused by a malfunctioning instrument, poor instrument-rock coupling, or out-crop-scale effects. The spatial coherence is approximately independent of component, epicentral azimuth and range, and whether P- or S-wave coda is being considered, at least for propagation distances between 5 and 170 km. These results imply a strongly and three-dimensionally heterogeneous crust, with near-receiver scattering in the uppermost crust controlling the coherence properties of the waves.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-30
Author(s):  
Zhang Liang-Yong ◽  
Li Xin ◽  
Liang Xu-Bin ◽  
Wang Tong-Dong ◽  
Tang Shi-Ying ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Hafidh A. A. Ghalib ◽  
Gordon Kraft ◽  
Abdulmutaleb Alchalbi ◽  
Robert Wagner

Abstract On 4 August 2020 Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, was rocked by a sequence of colocated fires and chemical explosions that left hundreds of people dead, thousands injured and homeless, demolished the city’s seaport, and heavily damaged the surrounding neighborhoods and businesses. The event was well recorded by many regional seismic stations in and around the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Using a network of 58 stations, 105 regional seismic phases, and a Bayesian methodology places the event at 1.8 km south of the ground-truth location, the seaport warehouse. Achieving this accuracy is significant, considering very limited local seismic data were available to use in this study. The location bias is attributed, in large part, to a small but statistically significant difference in the Moho velocity for sea paths compared with continental paths. The depth to the Moho is generally consistent with the iasp91 model. Concurrent to the port explosion is a series of unrelated small explosions, 11 s apart, attributed to a seismic survey that was being carried out at the time in the eastern Mediterranean Sea using air guns.


Geology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (12) ◽  
pp. 1176-1180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erika Swanson ◽  
Aviva Sussman ◽  
Jennifer Wilson

Abstract Fractures within the earth control rock strength and fluid flow, but their dynamic nature is not well understood. As part of a series of underground chemical explosions in granite in Nevada, we collected and analyzed microfracture density data sets prior to, and following, individual explosions. Our work shows an ∼4-fold increase in both open and filled microfractures following the explosions. Based on the timing of core retrieval, filling of some new fractures occurs in as little as 6 wk after fracture opening under shallow (<100 m) crustal conditions. These results suggest that near-surface fractures may fill quite rapidly, potentially changing permeability on time scales relevant to oil, gas, and geothermal energy production; carbon sequestration; seismic cycles; and radionuclide migration from nuclear waste storage and underground nuclear explosions.


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