A Method of Timbering at the Mount Rex Tin Mine, Ben Lomond, Tasmania

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
2
File Size:
108 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1904

Abstract

The ore body being worked is about one hundred feet in length by seventy feet in width. A face of about fifteen feet is stoped over the whole level at one operation, this height standing without any timber.Double lines of logs, twenty feet in length and from ten inches to one foot in thickness at the small end, are then laid longitudinally, butt to butt, and breaking joint from end to end of the ore body they are at ten feet centres from wall to wall. The starting logs are single for the first ten feet and their ends are hitched into the solid rock. These are called "miners" and are the logs which are picked up as the level underneath is worked up. The double layer gives a better chance of picking up. Logs are now laid from the centre of the ore body at right angles to the miners, the ends being hitched into the walls. A space, seven feet wide, is left open right through the centre of the ore body...
Citation

APA:  (1904)  A Method of Timbering at the Mount Rex Tin Mine, Ben Lomond, Tasmania

MLA: A Method of Timbering at the Mount Rex Tin Mine, Ben Lomond, Tasmania. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1904.

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