IC 8280 Mining Methods And Costs At Section 23 Uranium Mine, Homestake-Sapin Partners, McKinley County, N. Mex. (00d65874-20dd-441d-919d-73555a2d44b4)

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 52
- File Size:
- 15998 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1965
Abstract
This study was made to present the mining methods and costs of a uranium mine typical of other mines in the highly productive Westwater Canyon member of the Morrison formation in New Mexico. Four mining methods have been used at the Section 23 mine: the retreat- room-and-pillar method, a sublevel-slicing method (also called top-slicing), the horizontal-cut-and-fill method, and a modification of the ring-drill method. The application of the methods at this mine and at other mines in the area should be of benefit to operators with similar problems. Ore bodies in the Section 23 mine are irregularly shaped and vary in size, in rock strength, in moisture content, and in uranium concentrations; different mining methods are required and mining costs are not constant. A 6-month period of operation at the Section 23 mine was analyzed and mining costs, not including amortization, depreciation, or Federal taxes, averaged about $6.80 per ton.
Citation
APA:
(1965) IC 8280 Mining Methods And Costs At Section 23 Uranium Mine, Homestake-Sapin Partners, McKinley County, N. Mex. (00d65874-20dd-441d-919d-73555a2d44b4)MLA: IC 8280 Mining Methods And Costs At Section 23 Uranium Mine, Homestake-Sapin Partners, McKinley County, N. Mex. (00d65874-20dd-441d-919d-73555a2d44b4). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1965.