Pillar Extraction at the Sullivan Mine

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
P. T. Bloomer
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
12
File Size:
7662 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1948

Abstract

Introduction Mining of the orebody of the Sullivan mine, which is owned and operated by the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company of Canada, Limited, has reached a point where pillar extraction is rapidly becoming a major part of the operation. Very few of the larger pillars have been completely extracted; consequently, this paper contains much that is theory and expectation. Due to early mining methods and the physical characteristics of the Sullivan deposit, similar conditions may not exist in other older mines facing the problems of pillar extraction, but it is thought that the methods employed and those contemplated may be of general interest. History The Sullivan orebody, which is at Kimberley in the Fort Steele mining division of the East Kootenay district of British Columbia, was discovered in May, 1892, by Messrs. Sullivan, Smith, Cleaver, and Burchett. After passing through the hands of several owners the property was optioned in 1909, and purchased in 1910, by The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, Limited. Early mining was highly selective, the objective being a clean, high-grade silver-lead ore. By 1923 the difficulties of milling the very complex ore had been overcome and the first unit of a concentrator was completed with a capacity of 2,500 tons daily. Capacity was increased by stages to the present rate of 8,500 tons per day. Concentrates are shipped over the Canadian Pacific railway ? to the Company smelter at Tadanac, British Columbia, for final treatment. Approximately 45,000,000 tons of ore has been mined to date.
Citation

APA: P. T. Bloomer  (1948)  Pillar Extraction at the Sullivan Mine

MLA: P. T. Bloomer Pillar Extraction at the Sullivan Mine. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1948.

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