Mining Pitching Seams under Dangerous Roof Conditions

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. B. De Hart
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
22
File Size:
6506 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

This paper has been confined to the consideration of the working of thick seams, from six feet to sixteen feet, which are pitching at about thirty degrees to the horizontal. The discussion has been limited to these set conditions because they are the ones of commonest occurrence in the Southern Alberta bituminous coal district, because, from the point of view of safety, thin seams are more easily worked, and because a discussion of all the possible combinations of thick and thin seams pitching at angles varying from zero to ninety degrees with the horizontal would involve a task impossible in the time available. It has been assumed that the mine makes gas freely and that the coal is friable and tends to make inflammable dust which is highly explosive. Since the problem requires the taking into account means of maintaining a high proportion of lump coal, it is further assumed that lump coal commands a price considerably higher than the price which can be obtained for run-of-mine or for slack coal. Figure 1, tabulating the various factors which must be considered and their relation to each other, indicates diagrammatically the complexity of the problem. Any method of working becomes divided into two distinct components, the active workings of the mine and the old abandoned workings. While these are in a measure distinct, they are nevertheless inter-related, as shown in the diagram.
Citation

APA: J. B. De Hart  (1930)  Mining Pitching Seams under Dangerous Roof Conditions

MLA: J. B. De Hart Mining Pitching Seams under Dangerous Roof Conditions. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1930.

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