Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Relationship Between Floor Rock Stress And Floor FailureBy X. S. Tan
This paper deals with the analysis of stress condition on the interface between two types of floor rock materials when the vertical stress is larger, or when the horizontal stress is larger in a recta
Jan 1, 1990
-
Direct Laboratory Tensile Testing Of Select Yielding Rock Bolt SystemsBy John D. VandeKraats
Yielding rock bolt support systems have been developed to accommodate ground movement in shifting ground such as in coal operations; in creeping ground such as salt, trona, and potash; and in swelling
Jan 1, 1996
-
Multiple Seam Mining Feasibility in the Illinois Basin (USA): LaModel Stress Analysis ProgramsBy Rebecca Hardy
The escalating demand for coal, in addition to the steady depletion of reserves, has produced increasingly difficult mining conditions for coal mining companies within the United States, resulting in
Jan 1, 2006
-
Evaluation Of Tailgate Ground And Support Interaction In The Illinois Basin For The Development Of A Ground Reaction Curve Based Standing Support Design (b187e562-fd74-46c1-b2f9-93667db20030)By Dennis Dolinar
Improperly designed support systems have led to unplanned roof falls in longwall tailgates. To prevent such falls requires appropriate support and adequately designed support systems. The National Ins
Jan 1, 2009
-
Analysis Of Entry Roof Failure And Falls At Springvale CollieryBy Wm. Mark Hart
High horizontal stresses and shear failure have been considered the major reasons that cause entry roof failure and falls for underground mining. Therefore, reorientation of the current mining systems
Jan 1, 1996
-
Weightings And Water Inflows During Longwall WorkingBy I. W. Farmer
Weightings and water inflows into longwall workings often occur together, giving rise to discussions on their relative genesis. Case histories are introduced which indicate that most water inflows are
Jan 1, 1996
-
Calibrating the Lamodel Program for Site Specific ConditionsBy Keith A. Heasley
The LaModel program has been used successfully in the United States for many years to design pillars to ensure global stability of pillar recovery operations. However, the recent Crandall Canyon Mine
Jan 1, 2012
-
Geostatistical Methods For Hazard Assessment And Site Characterization In MiningBy Jennifer Riefenberg
Ground control hazards, coal quality, ore reserve estimation, and pollution modeling seem unrelated topics from most mining perspectives. However, geostatistical methods can be used to characterize ea
Jan 1, 1996
-
Dynamic rock anchorsBy James J. Scott
Dynamic rock anchors are interior fixtures developed by the author which promise to be a revolutionary development in the field of ground control. The fixtures are designed to be placed in the ground
Jan 1, 1989
-
Engineering Classification of ShalesBy Robert A. Siokler
Approximately 75 percentage of the earth's land surface is comprised of shale or shale-like materials. Shale itself is composed of the residue from an almost infinite variety of weathered parent
Jan 1, 1986
-
On Rock Failure Criteria for Coal Measure RocksBy Murali Gadde
Design of underground excavations in coal mines involves two major tasks: estimation of stresses and determination of rock mass strength. Owing to the complicated nature of rock mass, progress in its
Jan 1, 2007
-
Optimization of the Stress Control Method to Improve Productivity and Safety in Underground Coal MiningBy Shosei Serata
The Stress Control Method improves productivity and safety in underground coal mining. The method stabilizes the roofs and floors of mine openings in both shallow and deep coal beds, regardless of whe
Jan 1, 1986
-
Bi-Directional Shield Recovery in a Wide Face Longwall Move with a Pre-Driven Recovery Room under Weak Roof ConditionsBy Peter Zhang
Shield recovery in a longwall move is normally conducted from tailgate to headgate. However, if the face is wide and the immediate roof is weak, difficult conditions with considerable roof sag, excess
Jan 1, 2007
-
Monitoring Coal Mine Seismicity with an Automated Wireless Digital Strong-Motion NetworkBy Peter Swanson
A seismic monitoring network has been installed in western Colorado (USA) in the vicinity of three underground coal mines to (i) distinguish and characterize seismic activity as either mining related
Jan 1, 2008
-
Field Experience Of Measuring The Acoustic Energy From A Hammer Blow To Coal Mine Roof And Its Relationship To Roof StabilityBy Peter Altounyan
The rate of decay of the energy from a hammer blow to a coal mine roof is related to the size and nature of the contacts between the rock being struck and its surroundings The use of this principle as
Jan 1, 2000
-
Effects of Rock/Coal Interface Property on Coal Pillar StrengthBy Jun Lu
There are many factors affecting the strength of pillar, including width-to-height (W/H) ratio, mechanical properties of coal and surrounding rocks, property of partings in the coal, and the interface
Jan 1, 2008
-
Pre-mining stresses at some hard rock mines in the Canadian Shield (2c76bca0-8dd2-4a44-bc9b-85524b3514cf)By B. Arjang
ABSTRACT: Ground stresses are one of the significant factors in the context of rockbursts and underground instability at some hard rock mines in Canada. Overcoring strain relief measurements using tri
Jan 1, 1989
-
Pre-Driven Longwall Recovery Room Under Weak Roof Conditions ? Design, Evaluation, and MonitoringBy Peter (Yunqing) Zhang
Longwall recovery under weak roof conditions could have considerable delay if the immediate roof is weak and deteriorates during screening. A pre-driven longwall recovery room is a feasible solution
Jan 1, 2006
-
Design Methods To Control Violent Pillar Failures In Room-And-Pillar Mines (V. S. Bureau of Mines)By R. Karl Zipf
The sudden, violent collapse of large areas of room-and-pillar mines poses a special hazard to miners and mine operators. This type of failure, termed a "Cascading Pillar Failure" (CPF), occurs when o
Jan 1, 1996
-
Microseismic Monitoring In The Sydney CoalfieldBy G. R. Corbett
Between 1977 and 1984, No. 26 Colliery, at Glace Bay in the Sydney Coalfield, suffered from a series of 37 rock/gas outbursts. These events were characterized by the complete pulverization of a sandst
Jan 1, 1994