OFR-23-75 Microseismic Techniques Applied To Coal Mine Safety

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. Reginald Hardy
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
215
File Size:
69040 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1974

Abstract

This report describes the results of a research project carried out to investigate the feasibility of using transducer arrays, located on surface or in shallow boreholes, above an active coal mine to detect and locate the source of underground microseismic activity which normally occurs during mining. The initial stage of the project involves the design and development of a self-contained mobile microseismic monitoring facility capable of use in remote field locations. Following this a variety of transducers, and transducer field installation techniques were investigated to obtain optimum sensitivity and high signal-to-noise characteristics. Preliminary efforts were also undertaken to develop semi-automated techniques for analysis of microseismic field data. Using the facilities and techniques developed field studies were carried out at a number of surface locations over a central Pennsylvania coal mine operating at depths of the order of 500 feet. In particular studies were con-ducted over a previously mined development area, troubled by extensive problems of roof instability, and over two longwall panels during mining. Although many of the field studies were carried out during the development stage of the project, results in general have been most encouraging. Limited results were obtained over the development area, however excellent microseismic signals, correlating with underground strata instability, were detected over both long-wall areas, proving the general feasibility of surface monitoring techniques. More recent studies, carried out as part of a subsequent project, and utilizing modified geophone installation techniques at a third longwall site, have verified explicitly the feasibility of measuring underground microseismic activity from surface locations. Sections of typical field data are included in this report along with a brief review of the studies carried out at each of the field sites. Detailed analysis of data obtained at the second and third longwall test sites will be presented in a later report.
Citation

APA: H. Reginald Hardy  (1974)  OFR-23-75 Microseismic Techniques Applied To Coal Mine Safety

MLA: H. Reginald Hardy OFR-23-75 Microseismic Techniques Applied To Coal Mine Safety. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1974.

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