Bulletin 45 Sand Available for Filling Mine Workings in the Northern Anthracite Basin in PA

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 38
- File Size:
- 1899 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1913
Abstract
In mining coal in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania the general
custom has been to leave a large percentage of the coal in place as
pillars to support the roof. Evidently any practice that involves
partial waste of an important mineral resource is bound to be discarded.
It is well recognized that one method of obviating probable
waste is to fill the workings with cheap or worthless materials, a
process extensively employed in the anthracite and some European
mines. At present many of the collieries in the anthracite region of
Pennsylvania are utilizing refuse from the old culm banks, which
formerly were prominent features in the landscape, and are flushing
the fine waste underground so that pillars may be reduced in size or
removed. As a result the banks are now disappearing and soon will
be gone. The fine culm from the breakers and rock from the mines
will continue to be available, but the volume of these materials is
insufficient to replace any considerable proportion of the coal removed.
The next stage of progress suggested is the use of sand. Fortunately
there are available large deposits of this material, much of which can
be handled by dredges and pumps.
This report is issued by the Bureau of Mines in the interest of
safer and more efficient mining methods. I ts purpose is to describe
the sand deposits in the northern anthracite coal field in Luzerne
and Lackawanna Counties, Pa, Much of the information available
is presented in the map, Plate I. Field studies, mostly preliminary,
were made in the summer of 1911 to determine the distribution,
amount, and character of the larger deposits. It was not thought
desirable to make a detailed examination of the region because
when the coal companies decide to utilize the sand their engineers
will make precise surveys and drill test holes.
In preparing the map the various coal companies were consulted;
they contributed a large number of facts, especially as to the deposits
in the buried valley of the Susquehanna between Pittston and Nan- ticoke, where nearly 1,000 test holes have been bored. The results
of these borings were placed at the author's disposal, and have been
utilized in drawing the boundaries given in the wide valley area and
its extensions up Lackawanna River and NewportCreek. Wyoming
Valley contains deposits of sand that are 100 feet thick over a wide
area, 200 feet thick in places, and over 300 feet thick in the deep
old channel south of Plymouth.
Citation
APA:
(1913) Bulletin 45 Sand Available for Filling Mine Workings in the Northern Anthracite Basin in PAMLA: Bulletin 45 Sand Available for Filling Mine Workings in the Northern Anthracite Basin in PA. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1913.