OFR-166-81 Delineation Of Geologic Roof Hazards In Selected Coal Beds In Eastern Kentucky With Landsat Imagery Studies In Eastern Kentucky And The Dunkard Basin

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
David K. Hylbert
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
99
File Size:
29821 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1980

Abstract

This study investigated stratigraphic and structural causes of roof falls in room-and-pillar drift coal mines in nine mines in eastern Kentucky. A contract modification provided for remote sensing studies in the Dunkard Basin of West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Results of stratigraphic and structural studies of an earlier contract (H0133018) were applied to several new mines. It was found that similar rock sequences contributed to unstable roof conditions. Structure contour and isopach maps were found useful In projecting these trends together with fence diagrams. Using Landsat imagery, a direct relationship was found between lineament direction and the trends of rock jointing, roof fall zones, "snap top" zones and sandstone channels in the examples cited. It was found that, by analyzing lineament intersections, from 50 percent to 65 percent coincided with roof falls.
Citation

APA: David K. Hylbert  (1980)  OFR-166-81 Delineation Of Geologic Roof Hazards In Selected Coal Beds In Eastern Kentucky With Landsat Imagery Studies In Eastern Kentucky And The Dunkard Basin

MLA: David K. Hylbert OFR-166-81 Delineation Of Geologic Roof Hazards In Selected Coal Beds In Eastern Kentucky With Landsat Imagery Studies In Eastern Kentucky And The Dunkard Basin. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1980.

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