Bulletin 238 Subsidence Due to Coal Mining in Illinois

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 86
- File Size:
- 4229 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1927
Abstract
In 1916 the Bureau of Mines, the Illinois Geological Survey, and the University of Illinois, working under a cooperative agreement, began an investigation of the subsidence of the surface above coal- mining operations.
Four widely separated places where mining was in progress were selected as observation stations-one in the northern Illinois longwall coal field, one in the central Illinois coal field where the room-and- pillar panel system of mining was being used, and two in the thick coal of southern Illinois where the room-and-pillar panel system of mining was employed. These four points of mining activity gave a rather wide opportunity for observing subsidence when different mining methods were used.
The four places selected for investigation of surface subsidence due to coal mining have been designated as follows:
1. A, in the northern Illinois longwall coal field, where the coal company has been operating coal mines for 30 years and where long- wall advancing is the only method of mining.
2. B, in Perry County, where panel room-and-pillar mining of a thick seam of coal is in progress and where mining operations have been carried on about 40 years.
3. C, in Macoupin County, where the coal company has been min- ing coal by the panel room-and-pillar method for about 15 years.
4. D, in Franklin County, where the coal company has been mining coal for 10 years by the panel room-and-pillar method.
Citation
APA:
(1927) Bulletin 238 Subsidence Due to Coal Mining in IllinoisMLA: Bulletin 238 Subsidence Due to Coal Mining in Illinois. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1927.