Massive Pillar Collapses in U.S. Underground Limestone Mines: 2015–2021

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Gregory M. Rumbaugh Christopher Mark Todd Kostecki
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Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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Abstract

From 2015 to 2021, five massive pillar collapses occurred at four underground stone mines in the eastern United States. These events resulted in powerful airblasts that damaged mine infrastructure and mobile equipment, seriously injured miners, and disrupted underground travelways. Each of these pillar collapses propagated through the overlying strata, causing a subsidence basin on the surface. Pillar collapses are particularly hazardous for miners because they can occur with little warning and can affect miners that are far from the pillar collapse area. The following case studies show that certain factors may increase the likelihood of a pillar collapse. For instance, each of the five events involved the collapse of at least twelve benched pillars with width-to-height ratios (w/h) of 0.8 or less. This study elaborates on
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APA: Gregory M. Rumbaugh Christopher Mark Todd Kostecki  Massive Pillar Collapses in U.S. Underground Limestone Mines: 2015–2021

MLA: Gregory M. Rumbaugh Christopher Mark Todd Kostecki Massive Pillar Collapses in U.S. Underground Limestone Mines: 2015–2021. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration,

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