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ANFO

The factual accuracy of this article is disputed.


ANFO stands for Ammonium Nitrate / Fuel Oil, and describes a crude but effective explosive that is used by farmers to clear stumps and by the mining industry (because it is easy to pump in slurry form) to break up overburden rock and expose ore in open pit mining.

The formulation of ANFO is well known. Ammonium nitrate is a substance most commonly used as a fertilizer. When mixed with fuel oil (diesel fuel, kerosene, JP-1 jet fuel, etc), it can be used as an improvised low yield explosive. Commercial explosives based on ANFO are also available.

Because of the easy availability of its ingredients, ANFO is often used by terrorists for large bombs. ANFO was often used by the Provisional IRA, ETA, and Palestinian extremist groups in their bombing campaigns. It was also found in the Manila apartment which Ramzi Yousef occupied after an apartment fire led authorities to his apartment, which was a bomb-making factory and plotting center for Operation Bojinka.

So called "fertilizer bombs" were made famous in America by their use in the Oklahoma City bombing which maimed and killed hundreds of victims. However, that bomb was only remotely based on the traditional ANFO formula. It used a sophisticated triggering sequence and compressed oxygen to achieve a larger detonation than is possible using mundane means.

ANFO at standard temperature and pressure is classified as a low explosive. At extremely high temperatures and pressures, the primary oxidant undergoes a phase change that allows the material to become much more compressible. In this highly compressed state, ANFO is a high explosive.

See also

External link

  • http://www.stlawex.com/anfo.html



Last updated: 02-08-2005 04:57:46
Last updated: 04-25-2005 03:06:01