RI 5028 Roof Movement Study Of Mechanized Retreating Longwall Operation, Lancashire No. 15 Mine, Bakerton, Cambria County, Pa. ? Introduction

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 33
- File Size:
- 4613 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1954
Abstract
Recent developments in mechanizing longwall it mining in Europe have aroused considerable interest among American coal-mine operators because this method provides an opportunity to improve safety, production, efficiency, and recovery. The success of longwall mining in Europe has depended to a large degree on development of effective roof-control systems. One of the major contributing factors in designing these systems is development off improved supports, which combine high load-bearing capacities with controlled yield characteristics, to use in the face areas. Other factors that relate to successful longwall mining involve knowledge of the structural properties of the strata above end below the coal bed being mined, movements of these strata induced by mining, and effects of the strata movements on the strata itself, as well as on the support system used. Extensive studies of the above factors relating to long-wall mining have been made in coal-mining countries abroad, and corresponding studies (1, 2, 3, 4, 5)3/ of room-and-pillar operations have been made in this country. Although descriptions and results of experiments of mechanized longwall operations in the United States have been published (6, 7, 8), this is the first instrumented study of roof behavior on a longwall operation. In view of the possible widespread application of this method of mining to American coal mines, where underground mining conditions are different from those found in European mines, an investigation was conducted at a mechanized longwall operation inn the Lancashire No. 15 mine, Barnes & Tucker Co., Cambric County, Bakerton, Pa., to study the factors that affect roof control. This report describes this investigation and discusses the results. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This investigation was made under a cooperative agreement between the Bureau of Mines and the Barnes & Tucker Co., Barnesboro, Pa., end was conducted in the Lancashire No. 15 mine located at Bakerton, Cambria County, Pa. The authors acknowledge the cooperation given by Richard Z. Todhunter, Sr., president, Richard T. Todhunter, Jr., general manager, and other mine officials and employees of the Barnes & Tucker Co. Mr. Edward Thomas, chief, Roof Control Section, Bureau of Mines, Washington, D. C., and Dr. Leonard Obert, chief, Applied Physics Branch. College Park, Md., collaborated in the planning and promulgation of the program investigation.
Citation
APA:
(1954) RI 5028 Roof Movement Study Of Mechanized Retreating Longwall Operation, Lancashire No. 15 Mine, Bakerton, Cambria County, Pa. ? IntroductionMLA: RI 5028 Roof Movement Study Of Mechanized Retreating Longwall Operation, Lancashire No. 15 Mine, Bakerton, Cambria County, Pa. ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1954.