Geomecanics Aspects of Block Cave Mine Planning

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Enrique Rubio
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
7111 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 2002

Abstract

Several mining operations are currently evaluating the feasibility of changing their mining method to Block Caving. There will also be several deep low-grade ore bodies that will face the need to go underground in following their ore to depth. There are two main reasons why Block Caving is attractive: firstly, it offers the lowest operating costs amongst all the mining methods; and secondly, it is truly a massive mining method, offering the highest potential production capacity. Despite its longstanding popularity, there are still significant components of the method that are not clearly understood. Also, the lack of availability of key geomechanic information still presents a major obstacle to developing mine planning and production scheduling. There are several key issues in block caving that can make it feasible such as cavability, fragmentation, stresses will condition the way that a block caves and the way that material is drawn from the draw points. Consequently Block Cave mining method is a good example where the ore body has to be related to design and mine planning. The concepts of dilution, draw control as well as sequence definition are reviewed in this paper to illustrate the idea of integration. There have been some examples of mines where some of the components of mine planning have not been integrated causing a disaster in terms of economics or safety. Different layouts configurations might give a different result in the planning of the mine
Citation

APA: Enrique Rubio  (2002)  Geomecanics Aspects of Block Cave Mine Planning

MLA: Enrique Rubio Geomecanics Aspects of Block Cave Mine Planning. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2002.

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