Papers - Ground Movement and Subsidence - Subsidence Following Extraction of Ore from Limestone Replacement Deposits. Warren Mining District, Bisbec, Arizona (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Carl Trischka
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
8
File Size:
704 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1934

Abstract

During fifty-three years of mining operations in the Warren mining district, the mineralization has been found to cover an area roughly 2 miles long by 155 miles wide. Ore extraction from the richer portions of this area has been closely followed by surface subsidence. At the western end of the district, where the ore outcrops at the surface and oxidation is more complete over a wide area, intense surface disturbance is visible in the form of closely spaced open cracks and escarpments. As work has progressed toward the east, more unoxidized ore-bodies have been found and mining has been at increasing depth, for which reasons surface subsidence is less intense and subsidence blocks become larger and in general are bounded by open cracks, which persist over long distances. There may also be traced on the surface what appears to be a boundary crack, running in a northwest-southeast direction, marking the present southerly limit of subsidence of the district as a whole. It is not completely developed, and has not as yet appeared over the very deep mining operations in the extreme easterly portion of the district. Check surveys show that vertical and horizontal dislocation is still taking place. All of the various mining operations, including open-pit work in porphyry ore and underground mining of limestone replacement and porphyry ores, have had their influence in disturbing the surface. As these influences frequently overlap, and because the surface disturbance is continuous over practically all ore occurrences, it is virtually impossible to choose an area sufficiently isolated to ascribe the amount of subsidence to any definite volume of ore removed. After due consideration of all factors, there has been selected for discussion an area 1400 ft. long by 1200 ft. wide, which will be referred to as the Queen Hill block. It is bounded on all four sides by faults, which tend to limit subsidence disturbance to that caused by ore mined from within the block, and likewise to prevent subsidence cracks due to mining outside of the block from entering the area.
Citation

APA: Carl Trischka  (1934)  Papers - Ground Movement and Subsidence - Subsidence Following Extraction of Ore from Limestone Replacement Deposits. Warren Mining District, Bisbec, Arizona (With Discussion)

MLA: Carl Trischka Papers - Ground Movement and Subsidence - Subsidence Following Extraction of Ore from Limestone Replacement Deposits. Warren Mining District, Bisbec, Arizona (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1934.

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