ABSTRACT

The formation of cuttings and tunnels, and the removal of rocks in mining operations, are not the only service which explosive agents render to the industrial arts; there is, besides other uses which might be enumerated, the preparation of foundations for buildings, bridges, harbours, and lighthouses. The fibres which form cotton, linen, paper, and wood, are composed almost entirely of a substance which is known to the chemist as cellulose or cellulin. That this substance, as it exists in the fibres of linen and in sawdust, could be converted into an explosive body by the action of nitric acid, appears to have been first observed by the French chemist, Pelouze in 1838. The nature of the chemical changes which may be set up in an explosive substance, and the rapidity with which these charges proceed throughout a mass of the material, are greatly modified by the conditions under which the action takes place.