Analysis of pillar design practices and techniqes for U.S. limestone mines

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
A. T. Iannacchione
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
9
File Size:
5079 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 21, 1905

Abstract

Underground mining of stone in the US is increasing, as is the depth of overburden above the mines. Data gathered from mine visits, maps, discussion with operators and numerical simulation have been used to investigate pillar design and recommend safe practice. Many pillars have slender shapes with relatively large adjacent mine openings: width-to-height ratios range from 0.54 to 3.13 and extraction ratios from 0.56 to 0.91. The pillar material is often very strong and average overburden only 80 m, but occasional failure due to excessive local stress has occurred where pillar size had been unintentionally reduced, overburdens were greater than 200 m, width-to-height ratios were less than 1.25 or extraction ratios were greater than 0.83. Pillars with width-to-height ratios of less than 1.5 appear more likely to fail under excessive stress. When width-to-height ratios fall below 1.0, defects such as through-running discontinuities can have a significant influence on stability. Dip, orientation and material properties are also important
Citation

APA: A. T. Iannacchione  (1905)  Analysis of pillar design practices and techniqes for U.S. limestone mines

MLA: A. T. Iannacchione Analysis of pillar design practices and techniqes for U.S. limestone mines. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account