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Analysis Of Entry Roof Failure And Falls At Springvale Colliery
By 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
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Improved Intersection Design And Monitoring In The Sydney Coalfield
By G. R. Corbett
The introduction of roof bolts to Phalen Colliery in the Sydney Coalfield, Nova Scotia (annual output of 2Mt) has been successfully implemented in maingate and tailgate entries over the last four year
Jan 1, 1995
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Weightings And Water Inflows During Longwall Working
By 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
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Rib Support Innovation At Daw Mill Colliery (a22a0861-1502-4d3d-a2cd-8a6ba0c13271)
By Jon Bowler
Daw Mill Colliery, UK Coal, near Coventry in England, mines the Warwickshire Thick Seam at 800 m/2500 ft depth using longwall retreat with gateroads supported by rockbolts. Over the last eight years
Jan 1, 2009
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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
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Mine Stability Mapping
By Collin L. Stewart
The high cost and limited flexibility of modern longwall systems has resulted in the need for mine engineers and geologists to predict possible adverse mining areas ahead of mining and to then design
Jan 1, 2006
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Analysis Of Multiple-Seam Interaction In A Bump-Prone Western Coal Mine Using MULSIM/PC
By D. A. Donato
It is often necessary for a mining company to extract coal from a seam underlying a previously mined coal seam. The impact of the overlying mine workings on the stress distribution within the underlyi
Jan 1, 1996
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Prevention Of Time-Dependent Subsidence By Elimination Of Ground Movement Over An Abandoned Mine
By V. V. Nazimko
Abandoned coal mines cause subsidence and structural damages. Shallow abandoned mines induce the most severe and harmful damages. In addition, they produce time-dependent subsidence which is difficult
Jan 1, 1999
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A Roof Quality Index For Stone Mines Using Borescope Logging
By John Ellenberger
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has collected pillar and span data at 34 stone mines in 10 states to develop pillar and roof span design guidelines for underground st
Jan 1, 2009
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Analysis of Coal Pillar Stability (ACPS): A New Generation of Pillar Design Software
By Zach Agioutantis, Christopher Mark
"Thirty years ago, the Analysis of Longwall Pillar Stability (ALPS) inaugurated a new era in coal pillar design. ALPS was the first empirical pillar design technique to consider the abutment loads tha
Jan 1, 2018
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Analysis of Multiple Seam Stability
By Christopher Mark
Multiple seam interactions are a major ground control hazard in many U.S. underground coal mines. The two most common types are: ? Undermining, where stress concentrations caused by previous ful
Jan 1, 2007
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Keynote Address for 24th International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, August 2- 4, 2005 - Like Deja Vu All Over Again
By Peter B. Lilly
Thank you, Syd, for the kind introduction and for inviting me to give the Keynote Address at this very prestigious gathering of some of the finest intellect and talent in the domestic and internationa
Jan 1, 2006
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Requirements and Performance of Pumpable Cribs in Longwall Tailgate Entries and Bleeders
By Peter Zhang
Pumpable cribs are being increasingly used in longwall tailgate entries and bleeders for roof support under abutment pressure. Their high peak capacity and confinement-controlled yield characteristics
Jan 1, 2012
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Analytical Investigation of Shaft Damages at West Elk Mine
By Tim Ross
Several shear failures were observed in Shaft #1 at the Mountain Coal Company, LLC, West Elk Mine, after mining longwall Panel 23, 1,100 ft to the east of Shaft #1. It was speculated that this shear
Jan 1, 2006
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The Uniaxial Compressive Strength Of Coal: Should It Be Used To Design Pillars?
By Christopher Mark
The Bureau of Mines has recently completed a comprehensive study of coal strength. More than 4000 individual test results from over 60 seams were extracted from the literature and combined in the most
Jan 1, 1996
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Performance Evaluation Of A Cable Bolted Yield-Abutment Gate Road System At The Crandall Canyon No. 1 Mine, Genwal Resources, Inc., Huntington, Utah
By J. R. Koehler
Although two-entry yield pillar-based gate roads supported by wooden cribs have been commonly used throughout longwalling in the Wasatch PlateadRoan Cliffs coalfield of central Utah, a three-entry yie
Jan 1, 1996
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Subsidence Misconceptions And Myths
By Richard E. Gray
Subsidence due to coal mining is poorly understood by non-specialists. This has led to numerous misconceptions and myths based on limited observations and lack of knowledge. The three most common are:
Jan 1, 1996
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New Approach in Rock Bolting that Adds to Bearing Capacity and Yield of the Bolts without Increase to the Cost of the Technology
By Victor Nazimko
A new technique for reaming the holes has been tested. This technique is available for reaming a hole at its deep end creating an enlarged cavity that has helicoidal grooves oriented at less than 40 d
Jan 1, 2008
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Assessment and Mitigation of Subsidence Effects on a Tall Self-Supporting and Free-Standing Communication Tower
By Yi Luo
A longwall mining operation went under a tall, self-supporting and free-standing wireless communication transmission tower. In anticipation of that the ground subsidence process might affect the trans
Jan 1, 2008
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Detailed Stress Analysis of Longwall Panels
By Khaled Morsy
In the past two decades, high horizontal stress has been attributed to many ground control failures. Most believe that entries parallel to the high horizontal stress is most stable and least stable wh
Jan 1, 2006