Mechanical Properties And In-Situ Behavior Of The "Chino Limestone," Crestmore Mine, Riverside, California

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 22
- File Size:
- 554 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1968
Abstract
The Crestmore Mine of the American Cement Company lies at the eastern end of the Jurupa Mountains, 50 miles east of Los Angeles. Originally, a quarry was opened in 1908 for "limestone" used in the manufacture of cement. The mining operations eventually went underground employing first a modified system of block caving and later the "room and pillar" scheme. The limestones are relatively small roof pendants preserved in an enveloping and intrusive quartz diorite. They occur as two irregular lenticular bodies roughly parallel at the top and tending towards convergence at depth. Their dip varies between 25 and 30 degrees E. The presently mined lower bed, Chino limestone, is typically composed of alternating bands a few inches to a few feet thick of medium to coarsely granular white crystalline limestone and somewhat yellowish limestone (brucite marble). A "room and pillar" scheme of mining is currently employed in the lower body of the Crestmore Mine. The levels are horizontal and access is provided by a spiraling road starting in the old quarry. The present depth of operations is an average 750 ft below the surface. Fig. 1 gives a three-dimensional general sketch of the mine. The long axis of the rooms is in an E-W direction, normal to the strike of the beds. Fig. 2 is a horizontal map of the 130 level, the deepest level mined presently. It is in this level that most of the in-situ investigations have been conducted. The present investigation was made possible by a non-restrictive grant of the American Cement Company to the University of California. The program included a series of in-situ tests using flat-jacks, plate bearing,
Citation
APA:
(1968) Mechanical Properties And In-Situ Behavior Of The "Chino Limestone," Crestmore Mine, Riverside, CaliforniaMLA: Mechanical Properties And In-Situ Behavior Of The "Chino Limestone," Crestmore Mine, Riverside, California. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.