Geotechnical and Hydrogeological Data Collection for the Mining Industry: Tales from the Field

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 182 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jul 1, 2023
Abstract
Geotechnical, geological, and hydrogeological fieldwork and data collection for the mining industry is often conducted by younger, less-experienced staff members. In many cases, fieldwork personnel are recent college graduates or are otherwise relatively new to the mining industry. Due to busy schedules, staffing shortages, project budgets, and in some cases, poor management, new fieldwork hires often do not receive thorough training. In the past and the present, many workers in the mining industry learn(ed) by “doing.” While this is still considered to be the most practical approach and the easiest way for a company to determine the skill set of an employee, there is always some risk involved in the “feet to the fire” method. The reality is that field personnel are often collecting data on which major operational decisions will be made or on which regulators will base enforcement decisions. Inadequately trained or inexperienced field personnel may collect inaccurate data or fail to recognize key conditions that may influence decisions made by regulators, design engineers, mine managers, and corporate leaders. Even the best engineers may come to incorrect conclusions if they are starting with poor input data. Decisions based on inaccurate data often result in delays, budget issues, unsafe conditions, or even worse consequences. This paper provides numerous mining industry examples of incidences where inaccurately collected field information did, or could have, resulted in major adverse consequences. The paper also offers some simple approaches to minimizing the potential for such problems.
Citation
APA:
(2023) Geotechnical and Hydrogeological Data Collection for the Mining Industry: Tales from the FieldMLA: Geotechnical and Hydrogeological Data Collection for the Mining Industry: Tales from the Field. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2023.