A Range of Mining Techniques to Meet Site-Specific Conditions

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Stephen Utter
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
5
File Size:
851 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

One function of mining is to supply oil shale of the required grade and characteristics to surface retorts. The mining methods must he safe, efficient, and environmentally acceptable. Although the Bureau of Mines no longer conducts research on methods of mining fossil fuels, including oil shale, its many years of activity in that field resulted in a significant body of findings. This article summarizes some of these findings, with respect to oil shale mining. The large areal extent of Green River formation oil shales and the diversity of geologic, hydrologic, topographic, and other conditions, preclude the use of any one single mining and waste management technique. Instead, in most instances, methods and equipment will be chosen to meet site-specific conditions. Such methods include conventional surface mining (open-pit and strip), underground mining (room-and-pillar, sublevel stoping, caving) and in situ extraction (true in situ from surface drill holes and modified in situ from underground retorts containing rubblized oil shale). Combination or hybrid systems may prove suitable. Both surface and underground backfilling of spent shale waste may be practiced. Tremendous amounts of oil shale must be mined, processed, and the waste shale properly disposed of in order to meet projected industry production goals. For example, about 1.4 tons of oil shale averaging 117 L of shale oil per ton are required to produce one bbl of oil. A plant with a daily production of 8 dam' (50 000 bbl) of oil would thus require some 68 kt of raw shale daily. This is more than the average daily production from any underground mining operation.
Citation

APA: Stephen Utter  (1981)  A Range of Mining Techniques to Meet Site-Specific Conditions

MLA: Stephen Utter A Range of Mining Techniques to Meet Site-Specific Conditions. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1981.

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