RI 5156 Principles Of Reinforcing Bedded Mine Roof With Bolts - Introduction And Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 33
- File Size:
- 9838 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1956
Abstract
Roof bolting has been known for many years, although the practice had very limited application before 1948. Since then, bolting has been introduced as a systematic method of support in more than 700 coal mines and more than 200 noncoalmines and other underground openings in rock. By far the greatest number of bolts are used to support bedded roof. This is largely because of their use in coal mines, although roof bolts are used in mining bedded deposits of all kinds -potash (New Mexico), trona (Wyoming), and ores of iron (Alabama), lead (Missouri), uranium (Utah), lead-zinc (Utah), and copper (Michigan and Arizona). Thus, bolting has been successfully employed to reinforce bedded roof under a wide range of conditions despite the limited knowledge of the principles involved. This report develops the basic principles of bolting bedded roof based on elementary beam theory and on the results of tests intended to prove or disprove certain fundamental premises. Specifically, the objectives were to gain an understanding of the function of the bolts and the behavior of bolted roof and to establish standard bolt patterns. A combination of theoretical and experimental analysis was employed. The experimental method consisted of testing mine -roof models in a centrifuge. The models, the test procedure, and the model-prototype relations are described in a companion report (1)2/. A second companion report presents a method for designing systems of vertical bolts to reinforce bedded roof (2).
Citation
APA:
(1956) RI 5156 Principles Of Reinforcing Bedded Mine Roof With Bolts - Introduction And SummaryMLA: RI 5156 Principles Of Reinforcing Bedded Mine Roof With Bolts - Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1956.