IC 7468 Safety Achievements of the Continental Mine, Continental-Archbald Coal Co., Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pa

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 2332 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 1, 1948
Abstract
Much has been written and many discussions have been held concerning
the prevention of accidents in coal mines , and considerable progress has
been made in eliminating hazards to the health and safety of underground
workmen . Although much progress has been made in the reduction of injury
rates in the Pennsylvania anthracite field , the injury rates for the anthracite
mines of Pennsylvania are generally higher than the average for coal
mines in the United States as a whole , because the mining conditions , including
the safety problems , in the Pennsylvania anthracite fields are more complex than in other coal fields of the United States . Several factors contribute
to this extremely difficult problem , among which are : Multiple - vein
mining , steeply pitching measures , folds or faults , hard smooth floors underneath
the veins , and the remining or reclaiming of pillars in severely crushed ,
broken ground .
In the early days of the Pennsylvania anthracite industry , only the more
productive veins were mined , and this resulted in bypassing those veins that
were relatively thin and those containing considerable proportions of impurities
. However , the development of modern coal - preparation equipment , improved
marketing conditions , and the adoption of mechanical equipment , such as the
various types of conveyors and scraper loaders , have made possible the recovery
of the thinner and poorer veins . Furthermore , in the early days , little
or no attempt was made to recover the coal pillars , usually owing to the
great amount of virgin coal available . Consequently , much of the anthracite
produced within the last few years has been recovered by second and third
mining and frequently by fourth mining - in areas where operations had
been suspended for many years . In such areas , the coal veins and intervening
strata are usually crushed as the result of gradual subsidence , which intensifies
the hazards incidental to roof control , haulage , ventilation , and mine
gases .
Moreover , the use of coal - cutting equipment is not practicable in most
anthracite mines because of. the inclination of the veins and because , in
crushed -ground areas , the faces must be advanced slowly and for short distances
at a time to permit the erection of timber sets and the placing of
forepoles to support the roof and sides . Thus , the slow process of mining
brought about by these conditions has resulted in the production of only
0.424 ton of anthracite for each man- hour worked , as compared with 0.753
ton? for each man - hour worked at other coal mines in the United States .
A summary contained in Bulletin 462,8/ a publication of the Federal
Bureau of Mines , reveals that the rate of fatal injuries in the Pennsylvania
anthracite industry was improved from 13.47 deaths per million tons produced
in 1870 to 3.88 deaths per million tons mined in 1942. During the period
March 16 , 1942 to January 1 , 1947 , the fatality rate was reduced from 3.88
to 2.87 deaths for each million tons mined . On the million man-hour basis ,
the rate of fatal injuries was reduced from 1.643 to 1.130 and the nonfatalinjury
rate was lowered from 119.01 to 83.12 during the same period .
The improvements made in both the fatal- and nonfatal - injury rates have
required the cooperation of the workmen , the mining companies , and the State
and Federal inspection departments . Many individual mines and companies
have achieved commendable safety records which contributed greatly to the
over - all average for the industry , particularly during the 1942-47 period .
One of the most outstanding of these is the Continental mine of the Continental
-Archbald Coal Co. , a member of the Moffat Co. Interests .
Citation
APA:
(1948) IC 7468 Safety Achievements of the Continental Mine, Continental-Archbald Coal Co., Scranton, Lackawanna County, PaMLA: IC 7468 Safety Achievements of the Continental Mine, Continental-Archbald Coal Co., Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pa. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1948.