IC 6688 Cut-And-Fill Stoping ? Introduction And Acknowledgments

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
C. H. Johnson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
79
File Size:
32949 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1933

Abstract

This paper on the out-and-fill method of mining is one of a series on mining methods published by the United States Bureau of Mines. It has been compiled chiefly from recent publications of the bureau describing in detail mining methods and costs at various mines. Other sources of information were the technical press, the Transactions of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, the Mines Haudbook, and company reports. References other than those mentioned in Table 1, which lists the mines entering into this discussion and gives general data regarding them, are given in the body of the paper. The authors wish to acknowledge the kind assistance of many operating officials, either through correspondence or in the course of numerous visits to their mines. DEFINITION OF CUT-AND-FILL STOPING The out-and-fill method of stoping is that method in which relatively small sections or slices are taken successively from the lower surface of a block of ground by open-stoping methods, the broken ore being removed and each section filled with waste material before the next is mined. This definition excludes shrinkage stoping, even with subsequent filling; it excludes square-set and fill methods; it excludes the Mitchell slice method, which may be classed as underhand square-setting; it excludes the systematic use of stull sets and filling, which is a variation of square-setting; it excludes any method involving the caving of the ore, walls, or overburden during the process of extraction, although caving may be allowed to take place when the waste fill is withdrawn for use in other stopes; and it excludes any open-stope method without filling. Through variations, which will be discussed later, the cut-and-fill method merges into shrinkage stoping, open stoping, or square-setting. The use of casual timber support, such as props, stulls, or timber cribs for holding up weak portions of the back does not constitute a change from cut-and-fill to square-set mining.
Citation

APA: C. H. Johnson  (1933)  IC 6688 Cut-And-Fill Stoping ? Introduction And Acknowledgments

MLA: C. H. Johnson IC 6688 Cut-And-Fill Stoping ? Introduction And Acknowledgments. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1933.

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