Tunnel And Shaft Boring At White Pine

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
L. A. Garfield
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
472 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1969

Abstract

Since the start of mining operations at White Pine in 1953, over 22 miles of drifts have been driven for the purpose of developing the ore body. The drifts, normally driven in multiples of three or five headings, serve as conveyor belt routes, ventilation ducts, equipment and haulage roads, and initial access to mining blocks. Development openings in the flat-lying, bedded ore body are driven in rectangular section from 16 to 32 feet wide and from 8. 5 to 16 feet high. The floor level normally coincides with the bottom limit of the chalcocite values and the roof or back is carried at the most competent stratum adjacent to the top of the ore. A development front consisting of five headings and associated crosscuts is advanced at an average rate of about 100 feet per month using conventional drill and blast techniques and equipment. The cyclic nature of the functions involved in driving the openings and the need to include them in production schedules preclude significant improvements in advance rates using current drill, blast, muck, and haul sequencing.
Citation

APA: L. A. Garfield  (1969)  Tunnel And Shaft Boring At White Pine

MLA: L. A. Garfield Tunnel And Shaft Boring At White Pine. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1969.

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