Classification of underground mining methods

- Organization:
- The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 2270 KB
- Publication Date:
- Dec 1, 1996
Abstract
Several attempts have been made over the latter half of the twentieth century to devise a system for the classification of underground mining methods. None of these are found to be totally successful. A revised classification is suggested with three main categories being identified by reference to fill requirements, steep stopes and stratified geological environments. Methods always needing lasting mass or structure fill include methods with timber-structured stopes and those with mass-filled (or cut-and-fill) stopes. Methods associated with steep stopes are subdivided into steep-stope-specific caving and steep-stope-specific non-caving (or self-supporting) methods. Methods not in the first two categories, often used in stratified geological situations, are not necessarily restricted to stratified environments and include caving as well as non-caving varieties. This category is further divided into room-and-pillar mining, longwall and shortwall coal mining and the type of open stoping found in gold or platinum reefs comprising overhand, underhand and breast-stoping variations
Citation
APA:
(1996) Classification of underground mining methodsMLA: Classification of underground mining methods. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1996.