Earthing practice in metalliferous mining: results of study at Mount Isa mine, Queensland, Australia

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
G. F. Shannon L. McDonald L. Gatty F. Savaglio R. Sankey F. Bizzozero
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
7
File Size:
4103 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1991

Abstract

State mining regulations in Queensland stipulate that a mine be provided with an earth installed on surface and that all underground equipment that needs to be earthed should be connected via a copper conductor to this surface grounding point. The regulations further require that all exposed metal surfaces in underground substations be connected to an earth. In a study of earthing conditions at Mount Isa mine it was found that the physical anchoring of metal work at substations (with rockbolts and associated steel mesh) also provides an excellent electrical connection to the country rock. It was established that not only is the mine's earthing system grounded at numerous underground locations but also that such anchor points offer, in general, a path to ground with lower resistance than does the legally required grounding point on the surface. It is recommended that metalliferous mines should utilise a multiple-earth system and not a run earth connected to a single, above-ground earth point
Citation

APA: G. F. Shannon L. McDonald L. Gatty F. Savaglio R. Sankey F. Bizzozero  (1991)  Earthing practice in metalliferous mining: results of study at Mount Isa mine, Queensland, Australia

MLA: G. F. Shannon L. McDonald L. Gatty F. Savaglio R. Sankey F. Bizzozero Earthing practice in metalliferous mining: results of study at Mount Isa mine, Queensland, Australia. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1991.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account