Cave Mining - State-of-the-Art
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 13
 - File Size:
 - 1252 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1995
 
Abstract
Caving is the lowest cost underground mining method, provided that  drawpoint spacing, drawpoint size and ore handling facilities are designed  to suit the caved material and that the drawpoint horizon can be  maintained for the draw life. In the near future several open pit mines that  produce in excess of 50 000 tons per day will have to examine the  feasibility of converting to low cost, large scale underground operations.  Several other large scale, low grade underground operations will  experience major changes in their mining environments as large  dropdowns are implemented. These changes demand a more realistic approach to mine planning than  has occurred in the past, where existing operations have been projected to  increased depths with little consideration of the change in mining  environment that will occur. As economics force the consideration of  underground mining of large, competent orebodies by low cost methods,  the role of cave mining will have to be defined. In the past caving has  generally been considered for rock masses that cave and fragment readily.  The ability to define cavability and fragmentation, the availability of  large, robust LHDs, a better understanding of draw control requirements,  improved drilling equipment for secondary blasting and reliable cost data  have shown that competent orebodies with coarse fragmentation can be  exploited by cave mining at a much lower cost than with drill and blast  Methods.
Citation
APA: (1995) Cave Mining - State-of-the-Art
MLA: Cave Mining - State-of-the-Art. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.