Timbered Stopes - Mining Methods at the Buncker Hill & Sullivan Mines

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. M. Childs Stanly A. Easton
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
14
File Size:
453 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1925

Abstract

Methods evolved at Kellogg have had primarily in view the safety of workmen and complete recovery of the ore; it is believed that these results have been secured at a minimum cost. The ore in the Bunker Hill mine is of good grade, relatively speaking; much of it is quite rich and no mining method would be successful which did not recover all of the ore. It would be possible to work certain of the orebodies by shrinkage methods, or some form of top-slicing, at probably lower costs than by the methods now applied, but the shapes of the orebodies are so irregular that satisfactory extraction of the ore in all its ramifications would be extremely difficult. In past years, much high-grade ore has been lost in blasting, due to the unskilful use of powder in a galena ore, which, by reason of its brittle-ness and great weight, tends to scatter widely. Any method by which large masses of ore and waste are broken together will result in an imperfect recovery of the ore, and whenever large masses are broken, ore and waste will unavoidably fall down together; ore and waste thus become entangled and, although a pile of broken material may seem to have been well picked over, quantities of ore will inevitably be lost. This fact has been shown by persons reworking the filling in stopes that were mined by methods defective in the foregoing particulars. Safety of the men is secured by avoiding large openings, and by working mainly under timber, and at small faces at close range and easily inspected. In former years the principal source of serious accidents was "falls of ground;" it is now over seven years since a serious accident has occurred from this cause. The most prolific source of accidents during recent years has been "timber and tools," workmen being struck by timbers passed into the stope from the level above; this danger has been greatly reduced by compressed-air warning whistles and the fencing in of dangerous areas. The lead-silver ore of the Bunker Hill and Sullivan and affiliated mines is found in bodies of almost every shape, although vertical or nearly
Citation

APA: H. M. Childs Stanly A. Easton  (1925)  Timbered Stopes - Mining Methods at the Buncker Hill & Sullivan Mines

MLA: H. M. Childs Stanly A. Easton Timbered Stopes - Mining Methods at the Buncker Hill & Sullivan Mines. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account