Colorado Paper - Engineering Problems Encountered during Recent Mine Fire at Utah-Apex Mine, Bingham Canyon, Utah

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 486 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1920
Abstract
The general system of workings at the Utah-Apex is similar to that found in many of the western metalliferous mines. There is a vertical three-compartment shaft extcnding to the surface, from which the various levels have been driven to the orebodies. The 1000-ft. (305-m.) level, about 3/4 mile long, was driven as a haulage and drain adit. Geology The formation is a flat north-dipping series of alternating limestone and quartzite beds. Extensive north-south faulting and fissuring have taken place, resulting in the formation of large replacement orebodies in the crushed zones in the limestone. The orebodies are irregular in shape and size, but follow closely the trend of the mineralizing fissures. The ore consists of galena, pyrite, sphalerite and small values in silver and gold. Large masses of non-commercial pyrite are frequently found in or adjacent to the orebodies, and more or less pyrite is found for some distance in the walls of the orebodies. Lenticular bodies of a black pyritic shale also occur in the zones where extensive faulting has taken place. Mining Methods and Condition of Workings Geological conditions, mentioned before, have made the ground extremely heavy. In mining above the 1000-ft. level, square-set and filling methods were used, but not altogether successfully. The crushing of timbers extended even into the filled portions of the stopes. The filling material itself, consisting of limestone, shale, and pyrite, possessed swelling qualities which added to the difficulty of maintaining
Citation
APA:
(1920) Colorado Paper - Engineering Problems Encountered during Recent Mine Fire at Utah-Apex Mine, Bingham Canyon, UtahMLA: Colorado Paper - Engineering Problems Encountered during Recent Mine Fire at Utah-Apex Mine, Bingham Canyon, Utah. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1920.