Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Portal Stability In Rock
By G. K. Rogers
Portals, which are the surface entrances to underground excavations, are frequently overlooked and often difficult areas In terms of ground control. Failures commonly occur In the typically high angle
Jan 1, 1988
-
The Formation And Effects Of Transient Abutment Stress During Nonuniform Face Advance
By George J. Karabin
Since the inception of a qualitative pressure arch theory by Haak4 in 1911, much work has been done in an effort to apply this concept to underground mining. It has been used in both longwall and room
Jan 1, 1982
-
Assessment of the Rockburst Proneness in Hard Rock Coal Mines
By S. P. Singh
Rockburst is a sudden manifestation of the release of elastic strain energy stored in the rock. Therefore the tendency of the rock to burst should depend upon its ability to accumulate elastic strain
Jan 1, 1986
-
The Structural Response Of A Steel Lattice Transmission Tower To Mining-Related Ground Movements
By Robert W. Bruhn
A 125 foot high steel lattice frame tower supporting a 500 kV EHV transmission line and located over the gateroads of a longwall mining operation was subjected to ground movements from the mining of a
Jan 1, 1990
-
Study of load transfer capacity of bolts using short encapsulation push test
By Naj Aziz
A series of laboratory experiments were conducted on a variety of bolt types to examine the load transfer capacities of different profiled bolts in short encapsulation push testing. A 75 mm section of
Jan 1, 2003
-
Numerical Modelling Of A Monitored Site In An Underground Coal Mine In The Bowen Basin (20bead43-67f8-4fda-8d73-d3f230de1fe6)
By M. E. Duncan Fama
The aim of the paper was to model numerically some aspects of the extraction of coal pillars by split and fendering. A two-dimensional elasto-plastic plane strain model with strain softening and inter
Jan 1, 1992
-
An Investigation of the Causes of Cutter Roof Failure in a Central Pennsylvania Coal Mine: A Case Study
By John L. Hill
Cutter roof failure is a specific type of ground control problem which frequently results in massive roof failure. It is a cannon occurrence in coal mines of the Northern Appalachian Coal Sasin, causi
Jan 1, 1984
-
Study Of The Impact Of Mining Under Massive Roof At Datong Coal Mines, China (7e96e5f6-0b09-4bad-866d-2ffcd02d33be)
By Song Yong Jin
The Jurassic coals at Datong are characterised by their strong, massive sandstone and conglomerate roofs which fail suddenly over large areas, crushing pillars and creating destructive windblasts, col
Jan 1, 1992
-
Floor Failure Induced By Lateral Stress Ahead Of Longwall Supports
By J. A. Nemcik
Although floor failure at longwall faces has been traditionally associated with a soft floor, in many csses floor buckling has been observed just ahead of the longwall supports, despite the floor bein
Jan 1, 1995
-
Research on the rational structure of tensible rockbolt and the effect of surrounding rock reinforcement
By Chao-jiong Hou
The necessity of using tensible rockbolt in the roadway with soft rock, high in-situ stresses, mining influence and other complex conditions was discussed, the structures of three kinds of tonsibte ro
Jan 1, 1989
-
The Design And Application Of Propsetter? In Underground Coal Mines
By Clifford McCartney
The PropsetterTM System has been designed and developed to cost effectively solve problems experienced with conventional underground supports used in tailgates, headgates, bleeder entries and as suppl
Jan 1, 1995
-
Effects of Longwall Mining on Streamflow in the Pittsburgh Seam Basin
By Kenneth L. Johnson
The effects of underground longwall coal mining on flow in perennial streams within the Pittsburgh seam basin were evaluated. Four streams above four different longwall mines were studied. Overburden
Jan 1, 1997
-
Electromagnetic Seam Wave Mapping Of Roof Rock Conditions Across A Longwall Panel
By Larry Stolarczyk
The mining industry would benefit greatly by imaging geologic conditions well in advance of mining. In layered deposits such as coal, trona, quartz, and potash, natural waveguides form and enable elec
Jan 1, 1999
-
A Retrospective Assessment of Ground Control Research and Applications in the Coal Industry
By Daniel W. H. Su
This paper presents a retrospective assessment of ground control research and its successful application by CONSOL Energy over the past 25 years. Recognizing the need to improve the understanding of c
Jan 1, 2011
-
Techniques To Increase Yield Pillar Residual Strength
By Dennis R. Dolinar
The U.S. Bureau of Mines has modeled yield pillars to determine the effects of reinforcement techniques on pillar performance. Model pillars with width-to-height (w/h) ratios ranging from one to four
Jan 1, 1993
-
Successful Application Of Hydraulic Fracturing To Control Windblast Hazard At Moonee Colliery, NSW, Australia
By Ken Mills
This paper describes the first successful use of hydraulic fracturing to induce caving events "on demand" in Australia. Moonee Colliery operate a longwall immediately below a thick conglomerate strata
Jan 1, 2000
-
Recent Developments in the Use of Seismic Tomography in Longwall Mines
By Erik Westman
Tomographic imaging, commonly known as a CAT-scan or CT-scan, is used in the medical field to generate a picture of the interior of a body. Current research is applying this method to bodies of rock s
Jan 1, 2003
-
Scale Model Studies To Investigate The Effects Of Various Stressfields On The Stability Of Pillars Between Mine Roadways (359d84ec-978c-4bf2-a810-72bdf384bacc)
By K. Goshtasbi Goharizi
This paper discusses experimental results of physical scale models employed to study the stability of a pillar between rectangular roadways. A programme of laboratory investigations utilising a bi-axi
Jan 1, 1992
-
Application Of Bolt Design Criteria At Galatia Mine
By Tom Denton
The bolt design criteria, since it was first published by Dr. John Stankus (Stankus, 1997), has been recognized as an important tool in ground control design. This concept is based on the Optimum Beam
Jan 1, 2000
-
A Step Towards Understanding The Behaviour Of Wider Roadways In South African Collieries
By George B. Quaye
Conventionally, roadways in South African collieries are 6 to 7 m wide. This dimension is chosen so as to allow maneuvrability of appropriate mine machinery and equipment, to meet production requireme
Jan 1, 2001