IC 7499 Reopening and Developing a Small RedIron-Ore Mine, Gadsden, Ala

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
John C. Feeley
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
83
File Size:
5739 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1949

Abstract

The methods used and the funds available for the development and oper- ation of shall mines and the reopening of small abandoned mines frequently present problems that tax the ingenuity and resourcefulness of the mining engineer far beyond that required in the mass production from large deposits. The objective of this paper is to describe in considerable detail the means whereby engineers have solved local problems in reopening an abandoned mine at which equipment, facilities, and funds were limited... The Etowah Coal & Iron Co. Gadsden red-iron-ore mine at Gadsden, Ala., 18 of interest in this category since it is the only independent red-ore mine under active development in the State. All other red-ore mines in Alabama are owned or controlled by the large iron or steel companies. The The mine, located on the southwest end of Shinbone Ridge in the outskirts of Gadsden lies in an ares once productive. but now idle, for many years. ore is relatively highgrade compared with that in the Birmingham area, but the bed is thin and somewhat lenticular. The presence of a large blast furnace at Alabama City, 3 miles from Gadsden, and the growing scarcity of red-iron ore supplies for it offered inducements for reopening the mine in 1946. Up to the time this circular was prepared (1947) only a small quantity of ore (about 1,500 tons) has been produced and shipped to the furnace. A force of 14 men was employed in sinking the main slope and developing a third "lift" (a local term for level) 100 feet below the old mine workings.
Citation

APA: John C. Feeley  (1949)  IC 7499 Reopening and Developing a Small RedIron-Ore Mine, Gadsden, Ala

MLA: John C. Feeley IC 7499 Reopening and Developing a Small RedIron-Ore Mine, Gadsden, Ala. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.

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