IC 6383 Mining Bituminous Coal By Stripping Methods - I. Economic Analysis - Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Scott Turner
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
32
File Size:
13357 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

The present rapid growth of coal stripping in the United States is a curious reversal of the tendency of mining to proceed from outcrop to depth. A combination of technical and economic factors bas stimulated the use of stripping methods until today many million tons of coal We being recovered by open cuts from sites that an earlier generation of engineers would have passed by as not commercially mineable or, if workable at all, only by underground methods. The total quantity of bituminous coal and lignite mined in the United States by stripping in 1928, the latest year for which detailed figures are available, was 19,789,000 short tons. Of this, 71,000 tons came from small workings not equipped with power shovels and 587,000 tons from properties in which stripping and underground work were carried on at the same mine; but as neither of these types is representative of modern stripping practice, they will be omitted in the discussion that follows. The total from strip pits proper in 1928 was 19,131,000 tons, produced by 176 pits employing 385 steam or electric shovels.3 Figures by States are given in Table 1. Detailed statistics will be found in Economics of Strip Coal Mining; a study by O. E. Kiessling, to be published by the United States Bureau of Mines.
Citation

APA: Scott Turner  (1930)  IC 6383 Mining Bituminous Coal By Stripping Methods - I. Economic Analysis - Introduction

MLA: Scott Turner IC 6383 Mining Bituminous Coal By Stripping Methods - I. Economic Analysis - Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1930.

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