Contributed Discussion to "A Study of Mine Subsidence at Two Collieries in the Southern Coalfield, New South Wales" by W. A. Kapp (Proceedings No. 276, December, 1980)

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 273 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1981
Abstract
Mr Kapp's paper helps considerably to clarify the subsidence/mine geometry relationships in New South Wales. It is in the best tradition of the presentation of field investigations such as has built up internationalknowledge over the years.The Author has plotted in Fig. 10, the maximum subsidence developed over each of a number of panels of different width/depth ratios and concludes that the maximum possible subsidence over a super critical extractionarea is around 0.65 of the mining height and that this is reached with the critical width/depth ratio of extraction of around 1.5.Although, as Mr. Kapp says, the maximum possible subsidence in the UK can reach 90% of the seam thickness extracted the more usual figure for the first seam is up to 80%. It has also been found in the UK that with shallow workings such as those at Kemiro Coliery the critical width of extraction is 2.0 or more times the depth.
Citation
APA: (1981) Contributed Discussion to "A Study of Mine Subsidence at Two Collieries in the Southern Coalfield, New South Wales" by W. A. Kapp (Proceedings No. 276, December, 1980)
MLA: Contributed Discussion to "A Study of Mine Subsidence at Two Collieries in the Southern Coalfield, New South Wales" by W. A. Kapp (Proceedings No. 276, December, 1980). The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1981.