Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Causes of Massive Directional Roof Falls in Room and Pillar Mines - Two Case Studies
By S. S. Peng
In recent years many roof falls have been conveniently attributed to the adverse existence of a high horizontal stress. The normal practice of not conducting a follow-up study in a roof fall investiga
Jan 1, 1999
-
Bailey Mine Slurry Impoundment Longwall Subsidence Monitoring
By Richard J. Perin
Subsidence monitoring was conducted in proximity to the 1-A and 2-A longwall panels at Consol Pennsylvania Coal Co.'s (CPCC) Bailey Mine slurry impoundment. Monitoring fullfills federal Mine Safe
Jan 1, 1988
-
Prediction Of Subsurface Subsidence For Longwall Mining Operations
By Yi Luo
Subsurface strata movements and deformations associated with underground mining activities could cause problems to subsurface structures and water bodies. By incorporating the methods for surface subs
Jan 1, 2000
-
Roof Screening: Best Practices and Roof Bolting Machines (e5909744-6953-4a41-b02f-21226966b63f)
By Susan Robertson
Many injuries are caused each year by rock falls in coal mines. Most of these injuries are not caused by major roof collapses, but from falls of smaller rocks from the immediate top or roof skin. Vari
Jan 1, 2002
-
A Decade of Mobile Roof Support Application in the United States
By Larry Howe
Second, or retreat mhng with Mobile Roof Supports (MRS) has now been part of coal mining in the United States for a decade Their utilization has evolved into mining applications which vary in seam hei
Jan 1, 1998
-
Failure Modes Of Mine Tunnels In Stratified Rock Structures With Reference To Stress Field Conditions
By Hui Chen
The paper describes the use of a physical model technique to investigate the failure modes of mine tunnels with reference to the in situ stress field. The characteristics of stratification commonly en
Jan 1, 1993
-
Strata Mechanics Of Pillar Extraction Goaf Edges (001afab8-c7ac-48fa-af96-b8de57c1318e)
By John Shepherd
Pillar extraction carried out using various methods (split and lift, Wongawilli and old Ben) involves the formation of narrow fenders (commonly 7 m of coal) formed by driving "splits" for lifting off
Jan 1, 1992
-
Highwall Augering In Ultra-Thick Western Coal Reserves: Unique Geotechnical And Operational Challenges
By Timothy Ross
The Pittsburg & Midway Coal Mining Co.'s Kemmerer Mine is one of the deepest surface coal operations in the world, with the highwall extending to approximately 1,000 ft above the pit floor. To in
Jan 1, 1999
-
An Overview Of Bureau Of Mines Ground Control Research
By John M. Karhnak
The Bureau of Mines has a long history of research in Ground Control. For many years, this work was done at Bureau facilities by Bureau researchers. As the tiles changed, however, the area of research
Jan 1, 1981
-
Rock Reinforcement Longevity
By Francis S. Kendorski
Rock reinforcement has been in widespread use and generally has been accepted in underground mining and tunneling since the 1950s. The first rock reinforcement technologies employed were mechanical an
Jan 1, 2000
-
The Advance And Relieve Mining Method: A Horizontal Stress Control Technique
By Frank E. Chase
Sacrificial entries, roof slotting, and other tactics have been used to combat high horizontal stresses during roadway development in U.S. coal mines. In Australia, the "pillar extraction on the advan
Jan 1, 1999
-
Imaging Ahead Of Mining With Radio Imaging Method (RIM-IV) Instrumentation And Three-Dimensional Tomography Software
By Larry Stolarczyk
A clear vision of the future coal mining industry was developed into a hierarchy of technology needs by the National Mining Association (NMA) and the Chief Executive Officers of the mining industry. A
Jan 1, 2003
-
Support Selection For The Multi-Lift Mining Method
By Claude A. Goode
Large quantities of high grade coal exist in thick seams in the United States. Many of these thick seams are too deep to be surface mined and do not lend themselves readily to underground extraction.
Jan 1, 1981
-
Analysis Of Major Failure Through Integration Of Static And Dynamic Rock Mechanics Investigation
By K. Y. Haramy
Rock burst and coal mine bump research using static and dynamic rock mechanics instrumentation has been conducted for several decades. Research efforts typically have been conducted using static instr
Jan 1, 1988
-
Practical Stress Modeling for Mine Planning
By Keith Heasley
As part of the initial investigation and validation of a new boundary-clement formulation for stress modeling in coal mines. the underground stresses and displacements at two multiple-seam coal mines
Jan 1, 1998
-
Tunnel Deformation Monitoring "Action Levels" In Coal Mines For Support/Reinforcement Design
By Lorraine Kent
Mine tunnel support using rockbolts was introduced in UK coal mines over the period 1987- 1992 and is now used in over 70% of all mine tunnels. In every case the reinforcement design has been based on
Jan 1, 1999
-
Optimizing Secondary Roof Support With The NIOSH Support Technology Optimization Program (STOP) (9d51b6a2-7ba0-4aba-9b0e-5647ea8b90eb)
By Thomas M. Barczak
The decade of the 90's brought an unprecedented increase in the development of innovative technologies to provide more effective and easier to install roof support in underground mines. To facili
Jan 1, 2000
-
Review Of Pillar Design Equations Including The Effects Of Constraint
By C. Babcock
This Bureau of Mines report considers some equations for mine pillar design from 1833 to the present. Most of the equations are of essentially the same kind, using pillar width to height relationships
Jan 1, 1981
-
Surface And Borehole Microseismic Monitoring Of Longwall Faces; Their Potential For Three-Dimensional Fracture Imaging And The Geomechanical Implications.
By Styles P.
To determine whether 130 felt earth tremors around Edwinstowe, Nottinghamshire U.K, which also experienced severe surface fissuring, were caused by coal extraction, a surface seismometer array was est
Jan 1, 1992
-
Support of Tunnels in South African Gold Mines
By L. Z. Wojno
Tunnels in South African gold mines are developed at depths down to 3 600 m below surface where the virgin rock stress approaches 100 MPa and, on occasions, through rock where the field stresses excee
Jan 1, 1987