Geotechnical Challenges in Cave Monitoring – a Modern Approach

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 4090 KB
- Publication Date:
- May 9, 2016
Abstract
The Newcrest Mining Limited Cadia East Panel Cave mines near Orange, New South Wales, Australia commenced production 1200 m below the surface in May 2014. Understanding the mine-wide impact caving had on excavation stability was a primary objective to ensure a safe working environment as production ramped up in the Panel Cave 1 operation and establishment activities were implemented in Panel Cave 2. The impact of cave interaction between Panel Cave 1 and Panel Cave 2 and establishing monitoring systems to assist mine planning and production as both caves joined is explained in this paper. Monitoring tools such as a microseismic system, open holes, HI-cells, extensometers, fibre optic sensing, cave markers, closure monitoring, underground observations and damage mapping were used to characterise the performance and position of the cave back. The data and observations collected were compared to predictions from numerical and empirical methods and used to calibrate the numerical models for forward prediction and to develop site empirical design tools. The results and methodology for monitoring deep high-output caves are the key discussion points in this paper.CITATION:Lett, J L, Jäger, A, Thornhill, T, Rachocki, J and Mobilio, B, 2016. Geotechnical challenges in cave monitoring – a modern approach, in Proceedings Seventh International Conference and Exhibition on Mass Mining (MassMin 2016), pp 203–216 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation
APA:
(2016) Geotechnical Challenges in Cave Monitoring – a Modern ApproachMLA: Geotechnical Challenges in Cave Monitoring – a Modern Approach. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2016.