Virginia Beach Paper - Notes on the Unwatering of a Flooded Mine, and on the Permeability of Natural Strata to Air

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 196 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1895
Abstract
The coal-measures of George's Creek coal-region, in Maryland, lie in a comparatively flat synclinal basin, about 4 miles wide. The dip of the measures is, in places near the edge of the basin, as much as 20 feet in 100. The Pittsburgh seam, known locally as the " Big Vein," is the only seam worked at the present time. Ocean No. 3, one of the large mines of the Consolidation Coal Company, has its opening on the outcrop of the Pittsburgh seam, in a ravine which cuts into this seam to such an extent as to bring this opening to within a mile of the axis of the basin. After working all the coal to the rise of this point, the mine was further developed by extending a slope down the dip of the seam, making such an angle with the line of greatest dip as to give a grade varying from 1 to 10 per cent., down which the empty cars carry a rope from a single-drum winding-engine. The coal was worked from each side of this slope in successive Iifts during its progress. From the top of the slope, for a distance of 4000 feet to the fourth lift, the " make " of water is drained by gravity through a heading into the adjoining mine. Below this point the water was pumped into this same heading, at the fourth lift, from which point, as before mentioned, it flowed by gravity.
Citation
APA:
(1895) Virginia Beach Paper - Notes on the Unwatering of a Flooded Mine, and on the Permeability of Natural Strata to AirMLA: Virginia Beach Paper - Notes on the Unwatering of a Flooded Mine, and on the Permeability of Natural Strata to Air. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1895.