Proposed Method of Mining Coal in the Rockies

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
M. Piard
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
1506 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1928

Abstract

The scarcity of literature referring to mines in the Rockies has compelled the writer to co-ordinate information and advice taken at the very source. Help was gladly given by active inspectors and mine bosses. Although the field is unimportant at the present time, due to its distance from markets for raw coal, it is quite worthy of the attention it is receiving from two continents; for, with the commercial synthesis of liquid fuels, it would become the largest fuel laboratory in the world, provided, of course, that freight cost drops to a low comparative level. As explained below, there are no obstacles to economical and safe operation under anything like the typical outcrop shown in Figure 1. Although coal dust is probably more dangerous in the Rockies than anywhere else, the damp outcrops afford means of control. The abundant gas may be bled to the open air, and the rigid roof will settle gradually under a wide span of opened outcropping. The Panel Retreating Wall The Measures: Coal measures having an attitude similar to that shown in cross-section in Figure x are characteristic of the active coalfield on the Alberta side of the Rockies, and they are also found on large tracts of undeveloped land west of the divide. The small anticlines, not shown in the cross-section, do not affect the progress of a pillar line, provided their crests are connected to the atmosphere by drainage bore-holes.
Citation

APA: M. Piard  (1928)  Proposed Method of Mining Coal in the Rockies

MLA: M. Piard Proposed Method of Mining Coal in the Rockies. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1928.

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