Open Pit Mining – Eastern and Western United States and Canada

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Hugh J. Leach J. C. Van de Water
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
743 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 1956

Abstract

In open pit mining, as in other industries, it has I become necessary to improve operating efficiency in order to combat higher labor and supply costs. Moreover, orebodies are becoming leaner, pits are getting deeper, stripping ratios are increasing, and hauls are getting longer. There has been a steady increase in size, speed of operation, and reliability of the various machines involved in breaking, loading, and hauling ore. Changes have seldom been radical but are rather the result of steady improvement. Drilling: Notable advances have been made in the use of rotary drills and air powered percussion drills for blasthole drilling. Several hundred of these machines are now in use as replacements for churn drills in softer rocks such as limestone and shale. Their application to hard rocks such as iron ore and taconite is under current investigation, but in the Lake Superior iron mining district, open pit blast-hole drilling in ore has been accomplished almost exclusively by standard churn drilling. The only recent advance has been the use of larger machines drilling 9-in. holes. This has increased drilling speed somewhat and allowed wider hole spacing, with consequent cost reduction.
Citation

APA: Hugh J. Leach J. C. Van de Water  (1956)  Open Pit Mining – Eastern and Western United States and Canada

MLA: Hugh J. Leach J. C. Van de Water Open Pit Mining – Eastern and Western United States and Canada. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1956.

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