Grouting And Water Control In Kentucky-Illinois Fluorspar Area ? I. Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Fred C. Wrobbel
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
10
File Size:
1423 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1958

Abstract

Two counties in Illinois, Ope and Hardin, and three counties in Kentucky, Crittenden, Livingston and Caldwell comprise the entire Kentucky-Illinois fluorspar district. The output from these five counties, however, makes up over 60 percent of our domestic fluorspar production, amounting to some 175,000 tons of finished product in 1956, The area is rough and hilly. It is bisected by the Ohio River, and has numerous smaller rivers and creeks. Add to this a generous average annual rainfall, in excess of forty inches, and it is understandable that the-area-can boast of an ample water supply. An abundance of water, however, is unfortunately not always conducive to ideal mining conditions. The faulted structure of the area and the soluble Mississippian limestones make the subsurface sediments' willing hosts to the surface water. Limestone cavers and sinkhole topography also compound the occurrence of underground water. It is little wonder, then, that water frequently presents an economic problem in the area, particularly in vein-type mining.
Citation

APA: Fred C. Wrobbel  (1958)  Grouting And Water Control In Kentucky-Illinois Fluorspar Area ? I. Introduction

MLA: Fred C. Wrobbel Grouting And Water Control In Kentucky-Illinois Fluorspar Area ? I. Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1958.

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