Papers - Controlling Subsidence of a Large Inverted Cone of Barren Rock Lying above the Ore Body, Colorada Mine, Cananea Consolidated Copper Company (T.P. 938)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
William Carton Cyril U. Cooledge
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
264 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

BecauSe the rich La Colorada orebody of the Cananea Consolidated Copper Co. does not outcrop at surface, after its discovery (by churn drill) and before mining was begun, a large amount of development work was done to learn the shape and extent of the ore and to provide for economic and effective mining. As these openings progressed, the actual shape of the orebody became known and with this knowledge came the realization that mining this rich and unusual deposit without loss of ore or danger to workmen presented several difficult problems. This paper will describe one of these problems; namely, the handling of an inverted cone-shaped core of barren rock, on the periphery of and below which the ore occurred. It mas clear that as the ore was mined out from around and under this inverted cone of rock, weighing about 3,000,000 tons, it would hang over the workings, held suspended only by its own tensile strength and threatening to crash into the stapes below with disastrous results to men and mine. The method of mining developed during the years 1928,1929 and 1930 anticipated and provided for the eventual collapse of this core of rock. In November 1936 the core settled down gradually on the edges of the stopes, descending a total of about 50 ft. vertically. The men in the stopes had ample warning and no lives were endangered. There were no air blasts in the mine. The core broke loose from its top support at the 500-ft. level along old fracture planes and evidently is crushed to the ninth level. Movement was of short duration; the following shift went to work in the stopes as usual. No ore was lost. Geological Structure The shape of the orebody is illustrated in Fig. 1. The geology of the Colorada orebody has been described by V. D. Perry1 and by W. G.
Citation

APA: William Carton Cyril U. Cooledge  (1940)  Papers - Controlling Subsidence of a Large Inverted Cone of Barren Rock Lying above the Ore Body, Colorada Mine, Cananea Consolidated Copper Company (T.P. 938)

MLA: William Carton Cyril U. Cooledge Papers - Controlling Subsidence of a Large Inverted Cone of Barren Rock Lying above the Ore Body, Colorada Mine, Cananea Consolidated Copper Company (T.P. 938). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1940.

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