Caving Methods - An Experimental Study of Caving and Drawing Large Ore Bodies

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. S. McNicholas V. C. Rogers M. S. Walker
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
42
File Size:
8514 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1946

Abstract

During the year of 1944 and the first half of 1945, the Climax Molybdenum Co. made a study of some of the problems in block and panel caving, with the use of a scale model. The experiments dealt essentially with the type of rock and conditions at Climax, but some experiments were carried out to simulate conditions found in other mines. Most of the previous experiments on the caving characteristics of rock have dealt with sedimentary or broken igneous material. The series of experiments described here was designed to show the caving action of unbroken igneous rock. Con- siderable difficulty was experienced in duplicating unbroken material in the model. The results obtained are believed to be relatively correct, but verification must necessarily come from future mine operation. Observations in the mine and glory hole, together with statistical data, were used as criteria for creating similar conditions in the model. In 1913, George R. Lehman' experimented with broken material in a model for the Inspiration Consolidated Copper Co. and, more recently, P. B. Bucky2 experimented with broken material with a capping of mill tailings. Mr. Lehman's model represented a maximum ore height of 70 ft. capped by 55 ft. of waste. He varied the draw-hole spacing from 6¼ ft. to 8? ft. and 12½ ft. The material used graduated from fines to 30-in. maximum size. Some of his conclusions were: "(I) The less the distance between chute centers, the greater the extraction (Fig. I); (2) the higher the ore column, the greater the extraction; (3) the less the amount drawn at a time from each chute, uniformly, the greater the extraction of clean ore before the capping appeared, but not the greater the total extraction to a I per cent copper final product." (Fig. 2.) Professor Bucky concluded, in part: "(I) Drawing of ore may take place at any time from any finger and in any amount without affecting materially: (a)
Citation

APA: F. S. McNicholas V. C. Rogers M. S. Walker  (1946)  Caving Methods - An Experimental Study of Caving and Drawing Large Ore Bodies

MLA: F. S. McNicholas V. C. Rogers M. S. Walker Caving Methods - An Experimental Study of Caving and Drawing Large Ore Bodies. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.

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