RI 5631 Extracting Final Stump In Pillars And Pillar Lifts With Continuous Miners

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. W. Stahl
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
18
File Size:
18692 KB
Publication Date:
Dec 1, 1959

Abstract

"This study by the Federal Bureau of Mines was confined to pillaring with continuous mining machines and to mines where total extraction is practiced. Many different conditions and practices in as many coalbeds as possible in Pennsylvania were observed.Pillar extraction or pillaring can be the most productive part of coal mining if done properly; but it also can be the most dangerous if done improperly.Because of the need for more careful planning before and caution during pillaring, many mining companies resort to the undesirable practice of stumping or hogging of pillars with subsequent unnecessary waste of valuable natural resources. Pillaring can be done at reasonable cost and safely, as proven at many mines where complete extraction is practiced and enviable cost and accident records are maintained.Although continuous mining machines are bulky and sometimes difficult to maneuver, they have been used with great success in pillaring. Occasionally, however, a machine is caught, or men are injured by a fall during pillar recovery. This Bureau survey was conducted to ascertain how safe and successful pillaring (especially the removal of final stumps in lifts or the final stump of a pillar), is accomplished in some mines, while others have considerable difficulty under similar conditions.The Bureau hopes the information to be presented in this publication will prove beneficial to those who wish to recover more pillar coal and to improve their accident record during such procedures."
Citation

APA: R. W. Stahl  (1959)  RI 5631 Extracting Final Stump In Pillars And Pillar Lifts With Continuous Miners

MLA: R. W. Stahl RI 5631 Extracting Final Stump In Pillars And Pillar Lifts With Continuous Miners. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1959.

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