RI 6997 Stress Ellipsoid Determination In A Rock-Burst-Prone Area At A 4,000 Foot Depth, Galena Mine, Wallace, Idaho

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 27
- File Size:
- 3446 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1967
Abstract
Optimal planning for mining the deep, lead-zinc-silver deposits of the Coeur d'Alene mining district, Shoshone County, Idaho, could be facilitated by a knowledge of the magnitude and direction of the pressure acting in the virgin rock. The distribution of primary stresses should be considered in order to prevent possibly destructive mining-induced stress concentrations. This particular investigation was concerned with determining stress in a zone 4,000 feet below the surface and known to be ender stress concentrations due to mining operations. Disking of the stress-relief cores obtained in a vertical down hole permitted qualitative evaluation from visual observations; the results indicate that a high lateral stress existed at the time the measurements were made. Stress-ellipsoid determinations gave a compressive principal stress of -13,000 psi oriented about N 45° W and nearly horizontal, a compressive principal stress of -11,000 psi oriented about S 45° W and abut 60° off the vertical pointing away from the vein, and a compressive principal stress -5 -7,000 psi oriented N 45° E and about 60° off the vertical, pointing toward the vein. Subsequent to the overcoring stress-relief drilling, a rock burst occurred about 100 feet northwest of the test site.
Citation
APA:
(1967) RI 6997 Stress Ellipsoid Determination In A Rock-Burst-Prone Area At A 4,000 Foot Depth, Galena Mine, Wallace, IdahoMLA: RI 6997 Stress Ellipsoid Determination In A Rock-Burst-Prone Area At A 4,000 Foot Depth, Galena Mine, Wallace, Idaho. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1967.