Underground Geomechanics at Porgera Mine, Papua New Guinea
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 5308 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1991
Abstract
Mt Waruwari, host to the Porgera  underground gold mine in the Highlands of  Papua New Guinea (PNG), is a prominent ridge  of sediments and dioritic intrusives rising  approximately 600m above the surrounding  valley floor. Consequently, mining occurs in  a low stress environment where structural  and material considerations are foremost in  the design of ground support and  reinforcement. Three major rock types are encountered  in the underground mine. These are locally  referred to as "black sediments" (slightly  indurated mudstones and clayey siltstones),  "altered sediments" (derived from black  sediments by thermal metamorphism), and  "intrusives" of dioritic composition. The  rocks are moderately to highly fractured,  the black sediments being generally weak and  occasionally sheared while the altered  sediments and intrusives are quite strong  but often brittle. Mining takes place from a series of  stopes extracted by either slot and mass  blast or a modified vertical crater retreat  method (VCR), which are backfilled with a  cemented rock fill. Ground support and  reinforcement has been relatively conserv- ative to date and generally relies on  pattern reinforcement of all development  with cement grouted "rebar" bolts and mesh,  extending to pattern cable bolting with  occasional mesh in stope backs. In addition  there has been considerable reinforcement of  stope hangingwalls in some cases. A programme of broad scale structural  mapping, monitoring with extensometers,  material property testing, and stress  analysis has been devised to allow optimum  design of ground support and reinforcement  in the future. Considerable work remains to  ,omplete this task.
Citation
APA: (1991) Underground Geomechanics at Porgera Mine, Papua New Guinea
MLA: Underground Geomechanics at Porgera Mine, Papua New Guinea. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1991.
