Monitoring The Atmospheric Environmental Hazards Of Tunneling

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
D. D. Snyder J. D. Bode F. T. King
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
16
File Size:
1114 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1997

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Only in recent years have the environmental hazards associated with mining and tunneling operations been fully acknowledged and determined remedial action undertaken. The nature of these excavation operations leads to a wide diversity of hazards spanning mechanical, electrical, chemical, environmental, and physiological. The most insidious of these are unquestionably the environmental ones which have the greatest long-term effect and are the most difficult to pinpoint and monitor. It is the atmospheric contaminants that lead to a significantly greater illness and mortality rate among miners. Dust is the most prevalent, hence most important of the atmospheric contaminants. Respirable particles lead to diseases characteristic of many mining operations: coal workers pneumoconiosis, asbestiosis, silicosis, talcosis, anthrocosis, etc. But toxic and suffocating gases can be equally insidious and the most innocuous pollutant, methane, leads to the most imminently disastrous results of all - explosion and fire. This means that truly effective monitoring of the environmental hazards in tunneling cannot be limited to a few simple standard check measurements. It must include the most precise measurements we can make for specific, documented hazards and even for factors, such as noise and heat stress, not immediately obvious as hazards. The Federal Metal and Nonmetallic Mine Safety Act and more recent Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards are clearly designed to match such effective monitoring. We must, therefore, consider not only presently available monitoring instruments and those currently under develop-
Citation

APA: D. D. Snyder J. D. Bode F. T. King  (1997)  Monitoring The Atmospheric Environmental Hazards Of Tunneling

MLA: D. D. Snyder J. D. Bode F. T. King Monitoring The Atmospheric Environmental Hazards Of Tunneling. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1997.

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