Investigation of Subsidence Event Over Multiple Seam Mining Area
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 4
 - File Size:
 - 274 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1992
 
Abstract
An investigation was performed to  determine the sequence of events which caused  the 1987 surface subsidence and related  damage to several homes in Walker County,  Alabama, USA (see Figure 1). Surface affects  compared to mine maps indicated the subsidence  to be mine related. However, two coal seams  had been worked under this area. The upper  seam, the American seam ranged from 250 to 280 feet beneath the surface in the area in  question. It was mined-out before 1955 by  room-and-pillar method leaving in place  narrow-long pillars to support the overburden  strata, and abandoned in 1955. The lower  seam, the Mary Lee seam, ranged from 650 to  700 feet beneath the surface. The Mary Lee  seam had been abandoned in 1966 and  subsequently became flooded. The dewatering  of the Mary Lee seam workings in 1986 caused  the submerged pillars to be exposed to the  atmosphere. Due to multiple seam mining and  the fact that workings had been inundated  then dewatered, a subsurface investigation  ensued to determine the sequence and ultimate  cause of surface subsidence. Core sample  tests with fracture analysis in conjunction  with "down-the-hole" TV camera inspections  provided necessary information to determine  that the subsidence started in the lower seam  and progressed through the upper coal seam to  the surface. Evidence from the investigation  program established that dewatering of the  lower seam workings caused the marginally  stable support pillars and the roof to  collapse. This failure triggered additional  subsidence in the upper seam which broadened  the area of the influence at the surface.
Citation
APA: (1992) Investigation of Subsidence Event Over Multiple Seam Mining Area
MLA: Investigation of Subsidence Event Over Multiple Seam Mining Area. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1992.