Papers - Large-diameter Core Drill for Geologic Exploration (T.P. 1000, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Berlen C. Moneymaker Portland P. Fox
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
16
File Size:
916 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1941

Abstract

The development, within recent years, of core drills capable of drilling holes up to 72 in., or even more, in diameter, has made possible an entirely new and valuable method of geologic exploration. Although little used until recently as an exploratory tool except in the United States, by the Tennessee Valley Authority and the Corps of Engineers of the U. S. Army, for the exploration of damsites, the large-diameter core drill may be used to good advantage in other types of geologic exploration. Its principal utility is that of supplementing, rather than replacing, other means of exploration. Although core is frequently recovered intact, the greatest advantage of large-diameter drilling is that the holes produced are large enough to be entered by the geologist and engineer, and thus afford an excellent means of examining undisturbed rock. The walls of the holes are smoothly cut, and in some rocks nearly or quite polished, so that the most minute details of structure and stratigraphy are clearly disclosed. Such features as faults, joints, bedding planes, weathered "seams," and beds or layers of soft materials, which are not always amenable to disclosure by cores recovered from small-diameter holes, are conspicuously displayed in the walls of large holes. Frequent reference to the drilling of large-diameter holes is made in engineering literature, but comparatively little emphasis has been placed on their value in geologic investigation. It is, therefore, intended that the present paper acquaint the geologist, as well as the engineer, with the large-diameter core drill and the technique involved in its use, and also with its advantages, disadvantages and limitations as an implement of geologic exploration. The Equipment The equipment generally employed in the drilling of large-diameter holes consists of a trunnion-type drill head mounted on a sliding base, which allows it to slide clear of the hole and thus permit the introduction
Citation

APA: Berlen C. Moneymaker Portland P. Fox  (1941)  Papers - Large-diameter Core Drill for Geologic Exploration (T.P. 1000, with discussion)

MLA: Berlen C. Moneymaker Portland P. Fox Papers - Large-diameter Core Drill for Geologic Exploration (T.P. 1000, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1941.

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