IC 6816 Waste Filling Of Stopes ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Charles F. Jackson
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
48
File Size:
21228 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

Waste filling has been employed for many years for supporting the walls of stopes and preventing failure and subsidence of the surrounding and overlying rock formations, and its effectiveness for this purpose has long been recognized. It is used for permanent support in ground where timbering (including square-setting) is inadequate for more than temporarily supporting the walls of the excavations. It should be rioted, however, that effective as a good, solid fill may be in resisting heavy side pressure and direct weight, its usefulness for supporting large areas of back and preventing breaking and movement of the overlying rocks is limited. Even the strongest and most uniform rocks will break if the unsupported span becomes too great; and since filling cannot be packed tightly against a horizontal back there is always a possibility of the back breaking and consequent subsidence if the maximum self-supporting span is exceeded. Planes of separation, such as bedding and fault planes, slips, and joints, are common in all rock masses; these may occur above the stoping area where their presence cannot be ascertained by observation. If too much reliance is placed upon filling for the support of a large horizontal area of back (as contrasted to support of vertical or steeply inclined walls) large masses of rock may break along a. plane of weakness, compress the fill, and leave an open space into which caving of the overlying rocks may continue until the space is filled. In this paper the term "waste filling" includes any filling material other than ore - waste mine rock, rock from surface quarries or opencuts, sand and gravel, mill sands, or slags from smelting operations.
Citation

APA: Charles F. Jackson  (1935)  IC 6816 Waste Filling Of Stopes ? Introduction

MLA: Charles F. Jackson IC 6816 Waste Filling Of Stopes ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1935.

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