Ground Control Problem Associated with Longwall Mining of Developed Pillars

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
T. N. Singh
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
5
File Size:
1226 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

Board and pillar system of mining has beer, practised in India in view of abundant availability of cheap labour force, low investment and quick return. Subsequently, selective mining from thick seems and partial mining under surface features boosted the trend. As s result over 2000 million tonnes of coal is locked up in form of developed pillars inclusive of about 1000 million tonnes of high grade coking coal in Jharia field alone. The trend of pillar formation is still uninterrupted as the estimated pillar reserve in this field in 1974 was only 700 million tonnes which increased to 961 million tonnes in 1983. The trend is not much different in other coalfields end as a rough estimate 100 million tonnes of virgin coal reserve is being transferred to pillar every year. The method of board and pillar mining is likely to remain moat preferred technology for decade9 to come in view of several inherent advantage in Indian mining conditions.
Citation

APA: T. N. Singh  (1984)  Ground Control Problem Associated with Longwall Mining of Developed Pillars

MLA: T. N. Singh Ground Control Problem Associated with Longwall Mining of Developed Pillars. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 1984.

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