Arizona Paper - Shaft Sinking Through Soft Material

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 335 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1917
Abstract
In shaft sinking for cod mines, the cost item greatly influences the method adopted. This holds true especially when soft material must be traversed. The average life of a coal mine is short. This is due either to the limited area of the coal basin or to the great expense of maintenance and haulage underground when the entries are extended a considerable distance from the hoisting shaft. Therefore, the engineer in opening a coal mine is confronted with the fact that the cost must be kept within certain bounds else the venture will prove unprofitable. For this reason he may be prohibited from adopting certain safe, but expensive, methods that are used in sinking caissons for foundations, driving transportation tunnels, or other work of permanent construction. A common method of sinking through difficult ground employs the aid of a steel shoe pushed ahead of the shaft timbers. Another is the drop-shaft method. These two methods were used in sinking the main shaft and the air shaft of the Eagle No. 3 mine, at Des Moines, Ia., and the following data show the relative success and cost of the two methods of sinking under the same conditions. A drill log of the material to be penetrated was as follows (see Plate 1, Fig. 1): Thickness, Total Depth, Ft. In. Ft. In. Drift................................... 38 38 Sand..................................... 2 40 Drift.................................... 2 6 42 6 Jointed clay.............................. 5 6 48 Drift, firm............................... 10 6 58 6 Clay, with sand streaks.................... 3 61 6 Sand.................................... 12 73 6 Shale, with two thin beds of coal and thin strata of rock......................... 86 6 160 Rock.................................... 5 165 Coal..................................... 3 9 168 9 Main Shaft Sunk by Steel-Shoe Method This record shows the first 73 ft. to bc of drift material, the lower 12 or 15 ft. of which was sand. The remaining 92 ft. to the coal was shale and rock, and offered no trouble in sinking.
Citation
APA:
(1917) Arizona Paper - Shaft Sinking Through Soft MaterialMLA: Arizona Paper - Shaft Sinking Through Soft Material. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.