Dynamite is traditionally made of an absorptive material (such as sawdust or diatomaceous earth) soaked in nitroglycerine, and packed in a paper, cardboard, or plastic cylinder, with a fuse extending from one end.
Yes, if fused dynamite detonates near unfused dynamite, the explosion can cause the unfused dynamite to detonate as well. The shock wave produced by the explosion can trigger a sympathetic detonation in nearby explosive materials. It is important to handle and store all explosive materials with caution to prevent accidental detonations.
a stick
You can't.
VERY carefully.
Give it a stick of dynamite.
put a stick of dynamite on top of it
A S%@t load of things.
Boom meringue!
true
Dyamite Pie
Roughly 15 thousand tons of dynamite. A typical stick of dynamite weighs about half a pound. Now lets do the arithmetic (with units): 15000 tons * 2000 pounds/ton / 0.5 pound/stick = 60,000,000 sticks Roughly 60 million sticks of dynamite.
2.1 MJ