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image: SCIENCE HISTORY INSTITUTE
To promote its “permissible” explosives among coal-mining firms at a 1930s trade fair, the Hercules Powder Company
staged a puppet show. The show and its marionettes explained permissible explosives generate a lower temperature and a shorter-duration flame when they detonate, decreasing the chances that the blast will further ignite the methane or coal dust that saturates a mine's air. The show was an updated version of a previous one, “Oil's Well that Ends Well,” shown at an expo, advertising its Vibrogel explosives for use in the petroleum industry.
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