The Construction Of Large Underground Excavations In Arizona Copper Mines

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 21
- File Size:
- 904 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1976
Abstract
Today mine shaft and slope contracts include a greater amount of ancillary work such as level and pump stations, loading pockets, rotary and side dumps and connecting raises. This ancillary work requires the application of a number of construction methods often for short periods and often at short notice if the contractor is to maintain a profitable operation. In the next decade, the number of shafts that will be sunk by a boring method will outnumber those sunk by traditional methods. This will be particularly true of the deeper shafts where water problems are minimal. The increase of bored shaft work will not decrease the work completed by the shaft sinking contractor but it will change it. A greater emphasis will be placed on the speed of construction of station and other ancillary work. To meet this challenge the contractor requires full information on the ancillary work as well as the shaft work at an early date, preferably pre-bid. The two examples discussed in this paper illustrate the importance of early information. The two main factors of shaft ancillary work construction are sequence and ground support. This paper describes two examples completed recently by The Cementation Company of America Incorporated in Arizona. The first described is a Rotary Dump-Ore Pocket-Ore Pass complex and the second described is the excavation of the Main Station Level in a 2 Station-Loading Pocket-Ore Pass complex. CONSTRUCTION OF ROTARY DUMP, ORE POCKET AND PASS Introductory
Citation
APA:
(1976) The Construction Of Large Underground Excavations In Arizona Copper MinesMLA: The Construction Of Large Underground Excavations In Arizona Copper Mines. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1976.