Construction and Equipment of the Ross Shaft, Homestake Mining Company

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Guy Bjorge
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
43
File Size:
3370 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

IN recent years the Homestake mine has been served by three shafts, the B. &. M., the B. & M. No; 2 and the Ellison, supplemented by an inside shaft, the Milliken, extending from the 2000-ft. level to the 3200-ft. level. In 1932, when a new operating shaft was under consideration, the bottom of the mine was at the 3200-ft. level. The B: & M. and the B. & M. No. 2 shafts were down to the 1550-ft. level and the Ellison was being deepened from the 2600 to the 3200-ft. level. All ore was hoisted at the B. & M. and-Ellison shafts. Levels below the 2600 level, which were under development only, were served by the Milliken shaft. Below the 1550-ft. level, the mine was served only by the Ellison shaft from the surface. Within a few years, when ore reserves above the 1550-ft. level would be depleted, operation would be limited to the Ellison shaft and the auxiliary underground shaft. The Ellison shaft alone was not adequate for hoisting the entire output from the deeper levels and also handling all men and supplies. Further-more, assurance of safety and uninterrupted operation required- two fully equipped shafts to the deeper levels. Therefore a new operating shaft was authorized in November, 1932, and was named for A. J. M. Ross, the mine superintendent.
Citation

APA: Guy Bjorge  (1935)  Construction and Equipment of the Ross Shaft, Homestake Mining Company

MLA: Guy Bjorge Construction and Equipment of the Ross Shaft, Homestake Mining Company. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1935.

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