Pit Slope Design And Risk ? A View Of The Current State Of The Art

- Organization:
- The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 30
- File Size:
- 1699 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2006
Abstract
Risk lies at the heart of all mining and nowhere more so than in pit slope design. Mining is principally about two areas of risk; safety and economics. This paper addresses the main elements of pit slope design and presents a view of the state of the art in terms of safety, design, prediction of performance, success and pit slope management. There has been a recent trend for serious injury and fatalities due to stability in open pit mines. The causes and contributing factors are analysed in relation to geotechnical knowledge, pit slope design and management. Currently there is no standard classification system for mine slope designs and it is considered doubtful if a universal system is possible. Designs are usually formulated in accordance with many different methodologies, various engineering principals and a number of different philosophical approaches, with results often presented in terms of Factors of Safety or Probabilities of Failure. However wide experience has demonstrated that even with apparently detailed engineering investigation and analysis at Feasibility Level, at the Operating Stage mine slope angles are regularly subject to large changes. The general experience is that these changes are ± 5° and 16° overall, which is considerably outside the accepted order of accuracy. For large deep mines these are huge changes and represent significant risks to the operations. The current state of practice in pit slope design is examined for two stages, feasibility and operating.
Citation
APA:
(2006) Pit Slope Design And Risk ? A View Of The Current State Of The ArtMLA: Pit Slope Design And Risk ? A View Of The Current State Of The Art. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2006.