Learning Our Geotechnical Limits and Pushing Our Longwalls Through Them

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Richard N. Campbell
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
8
File Size:
1956 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2014

Abstract

The world?s ever-expanding demand for energy and coking coals has resulted in the underground mining industry looking at taking on increasingly marginal and geotechnically challenging deposits. The drivers for this change include a reduced availability of open cut reserves and a lack of remaining ?good coal leases?. The lack of plum deposits is forcing some companies wanting to enter the coal supply market to purchase and operate in higher risk, lower margin areas. As geotechnical professionals, we are expected to develop strategies to facilitate safe and productive mining in ground that once would have been avoided. To be successful in these reserves, we are required to use every tool available, from exploration data to longwall automation, and invent or reinvent some new tools along the way. This paper presents geotechnical case studies of challenges in longwall mining and some of the methods developed and used to allow longwall mining to succeed where others said we would fail.
Citation

APA: Richard N. Campbell  (2014)  Learning Our Geotechnical Limits and Pushing Our Longwalls Through Them

MLA: Richard N. Campbell Learning Our Geotechnical Limits and Pushing Our Longwalls Through Them. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2014.

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