Bureau Contribution To Slope Angle Research At The Kimbley Pit, Ely, Nevada

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 49
- File Size:
- 13935 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1968
Abstract
In 1960, the Kennecott Copper Corp. and the U.S. Bureau of Mines entered into a joint research program to determine the changes in stress, strain, and displacement created by changes in slope angles. The field site was the Kimbley Pit, located near Ely, Nevada; the supporting laboratory investigations were made at the Bureau's Denver Mining Research Center. Following a study to determine the rock stresses in the mining district, the strike and dip of geologic defects (fractures) in the rock, and the laboratory-determined strength of the rock, a new slope angle and pit configuration was selected, and instruments were installed to measure changes in stress, strain, displacement, microseismic noise rate, and sonic velocities at several points in the west wall of the pit. Between February and November 1966, the west slope was changed from an average angle of 45° to a new slope angle that started at 45° on the south wall, gradually increased to 57 ½ at the center of the west wall, and to 61° on the north wall. The pit was deepened from about 500 feet to about 550 feet. About 2.55 million tons of waste and ore were removed by stripping and mining.
Citation
APA:
(1968) Bureau Contribution To Slope Angle Research At The Kimbley Pit, Ely, NevadaMLA: Bureau Contribution To Slope Angle Research At The Kimbley Pit, Ely, Nevada. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1968.