Surface-Water Seepage Into Anthracite Mines In The Wyoming Basin Northern Field - Anthracite Region Of Pennsylvania ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
S. H. Ash
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
39
File Size:
13799 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

THE MAGNITUDE of the anthracite industry's drainage problem in the Northern field of Pennsylvania is realized when it is known that, for the 8-year period 1944-51, all pumping plants in this region pumped an average volume of 112.5 billion gallons of water from the mines to the surface each year. This is over 214,000 gallons per minute pumped against an average hydrostatic head of 400 feet each year for that period (12).4 By comparison, Lake Wallenpaupack, the largest artificial body of water lying wholly in Pennsylvania, contains 71 billion gallons of water in its 24-square-mile area; the average volume of water pumped from the mines in the Northern field each year during the 8-year period was 58 percent more than the volume impounded in Lake Wallenpaupack. The natural configuration of the drainage area overlying the Northern field subdivides the total area into two major drainage areas-the Lackawanna River drainage area and the Susquehanna River drainage area overlying the Wyoming Basin. Although the 169-square-mile drainage area overlying the Wyoming Basin is slightly less than half that of the Lackawanna River drainage area (10), the total volume of water pumped to the surface from mines in the Wyoming Basin is 21 percent more than the total volume pumped to the surface from mines in the Lackawanna Basin. From this, it is apparent that the Susquehanna River and the pervious deposits in the buried valley over which it flows in its course across the coal measures of Wyoming Valley is the greatest single source of mine water affecting mines in this area. Because of its relatively flat terrain, the wide flood plain of Wyoming Valley does not facilitate rapid runoff; consequently, much of the surface water seeps directly into the buried-valley deposits and eventually into the mine workings.
Citation

APA: S. H. Ash  (1953)  Surface-Water Seepage Into Anthracite Mines In The Wyoming Basin Northern Field - Anthracite Region Of Pennsylvania ? Summary

MLA: S. H. Ash Surface-Water Seepage Into Anthracite Mines In The Wyoming Basin Northern Field - Anthracite Region Of Pennsylvania ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1953.

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