Investigation Of A Large-Scale Coal Pillar Failure (1d227dbd-e114-416e-a218-a26bd608b157)

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
N. S. Tanious
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
506 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1989

Abstract

This paper summarizes the results of an investigation into possibly the largest coal pillar failure in the USA. The newly opened drift mine is located in Southeastern Kentucky and worked an 11 feet thick coal seam, all other mines in the District worked seams 4-5 feet thick. The initial mine development consisted of 14 main entries (Fig. 1) which were driven in two sets of 7, under increasing depth of overburden. As the left seven entries came under deeper overburden the pillar ribs began sloughing which caused many of the concrete-block ventilation stoppings to crack. The mine management stopped the advance in the left seven and continued with the right seven entries. During the spring of the following year development resumed in the left seven, rib sloughage occurred again and this time severely cracked many stoppings and many were totally disintegrated from the excessive deformation. Within few weeks the sloughage was so heavy that many of these entries behind the active face were filled with piles of sloughed coal slabs. When the face reached a depth approximately 1150 feet, the sloughage became a slow, massive squeeze. The entry convergence (closure) reduced their height from 11 to 7-8 feet and the squeeze spread back to shallower depth covering an area roughly 300 pillars.
Citation

APA: N. S. Tanious  (1989)  Investigation Of A Large-Scale Coal Pillar Failure (1d227dbd-e114-416e-a218-a26bd608b157)

MLA: N. S. Tanious Investigation Of A Large-Scale Coal Pillar Failure (1d227dbd-e114-416e-a218-a26bd608b157). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1989.

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