New York Paper - Mining Operations in New York City and Vicinity

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 38
- File Size:
- 1643 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1908
Abstract
Although Greater New York does not bear any resemblance to a great mining district, the mining operations that are being conducted in and about the city are both extensive and interesting in character. With regard to the extent, it may be mentioned that, at present, there is more dynamite used in New York than in any mining district in the United States; that there are under construction about 38 miles of tunnel, and that 66 miles more are projected, most of which must be constructed .in the near future; that since 1903 at least 2,000,000 tons of earth has been removed in underground work, in addition to about 3,500,000 tons that has been removed in open-cut in connection with tunnel-work, and many times this quantity that has been removed in excavating foundations for buildings not connected with tunnel-work; and that there are to-day probably more than 5,000 men engaged in mining-work in and about New lrork City. These undertakings include almost every operation connected with underground work, from exploration by means of trench and boring, to the sinking of large shafts and the driving of large tunnels through every kind of ground from hard rock to soft, semi-fluid silt and quicksand. It is proposed in this paper to give a general description of some of the methods and appliances used in the opening-up of a " mine " in a large city, and a brief description of some of the &'mines" now being developed in New York, connecting as far as possible the methods described with the particular work for which they were designed, in order to give a general idea of the
Citation
APA:
(1908) New York Paper - Mining Operations in New York City and VicinityMLA: New York Paper - Mining Operations in New York City and Vicinity. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1908.