Surface and Borehol Microseismic Monitoring of Longwall Faces; their Potential for Three-Dimensional Fracture Imaging anf the Geomechanical Implications.
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 16
- File Size:
- 1809 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1992
Abstract
To determine whether 130 felt earth tremors  around Edwinstowe, Nottinghamshire U.M,  which also experienced severe surface fissuring,  were caused by coal extraction, a surface  seismometer array was established around  Thoresby Colliery. Over the next year, 785  microseismic events were detected. The spatio- temporal seismicity patterns are clearly  associated with the commencement, continuing  extraction and closure of faces. Of particular note  are events which locate at the surface and appear  to be related to the active fissuring. Events occur  within days of commencement of production and  cease when production finishes, with good  correlation between face advance and hypocentral  position. Naturally occurring microseismic events  have also been detected up to 1 km ahead of  active longwall faces in the Midlands using  triaxial geophone packages grouted into the seam  together with a surface seismometer in the top of  the borehole. The quality of these data were very  high and guided waves can clearly be seen with  the dispersive characteristics associated with  seam waves. In one experiment more than 2000  events were detected in only two days of  monitoring even in a relatively noisy surface  environment. This paper demonstrates how very  accurate locations (5 10 metres) can be  generated using three-component digital data  from only one borehole. The surface seismometer  and the borehole P-wave onset can give extra  precision for the height of the event relative to  the seam. The event distributions give a dynamic,  three-dimensional image of the developing  patterns of fracturing above, below and ahead of  the longwall face with important implications for  roof control, subsidence prediction and gas  Migration.
Citation
APA: (1992) Surface and Borehol Microseismic Monitoring of Longwall Faces; their Potential for Three-Dimensional Fracture Imaging anf the Geomechanical Implications.
MLA: Surface and Borehol Microseismic Monitoring of Longwall Faces; their Potential for Three-Dimensional Fracture Imaging anf the Geomechanical Implications.. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1992.
