A Comparison Of Equipment And Methods Used In Flat.-Seam Stripping In The United States And Mountain Stripping In Western Canada

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 2555 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1951
Abstract
1N THIS PAPER, the writer proposes to limit his comments to few generalized phases of the subject, based on his personal experience in the midwestern United 'States and in one section .of the Coal Branch in Western Alberta. The following statistics are submitted to show the importance that strip mining has assumed in the coal mining industry of the United States. In 1914, 1,281,000 tons of strip coal were produced, amounting to 0.3 per cent of the total production. In 1948, the total was 13~,505,000 tons, representing 23.3 per cent. In 1949, the percentage figure dropped slightly and this can be partially accounted for by the labour disturbances prevalent throughout the year. In 1914, there were 48 power shovels and draglines being used in the stripping of coal; in 1949 there were 3,712, not to mention other types of coal stripping equipment such as bulldozers, tractors and scrapers, rotary excavators, and stackers. At the bituminous coal mines in Western Canada, strip mining was introduced only a few years ago, two of the major reasons for its development being the need for increased production during the war and post-war years and the need to hold the line on increasing production costs, but even in these few years the percentage of strip production has in-creased to such an extent that some mines that, five or six years ago, were producing all their tonnage from underground operations are today obtaining up to 80 per cent of their total output from strip mines.
Citation
APA:
(1951) A Comparison Of Equipment And Methods Used In Flat.-Seam Stripping In The United States And Mountain Stripping In Western CanadaMLA: A Comparison Of Equipment And Methods Used In Flat.-Seam Stripping In The United States And Mountain Stripping In Western Canada. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1951.