25 Years of Ground Control Developments, Practices, and Issues in Australia

- Organization:
- International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 295 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2006
Abstract
This paper recognises the 25th year of the Morgantown International Ground Control in Mining Conference, by offering a twenty five year review of ground control in the Australian mining industry ? primarily in underground coal. The paper provides an overview of the developments in ground control design methodologies, practices and products. It not only summarises what has been done, but attempts to highlight at least some of the major issues, significant developments, controversies and areas of contention, plus some of the continuing gaps in our understanding or capabilities as we go forward into the next 25 years. Some of the issues included are in relation to: the development of the high strength bolt and cable reinforcement practices widely adopted today and the contrast between stiff and soft systems; a focus on local detail, at the expense of understanding regional stability concerns; dramatic improvements in the use of, and systems available for underground geotechnical instrumentation and monitoring; some of the ground control management trends, including occupational health and safety concerns, availability of suitably trained staff and legislative requirements; the opposing approaches of the empiricists versus the numerical modellers ? is there some middle ground?
Citation
APA:
(2006) 25 Years of Ground Control Developments, Practices, and Issues in AustraliaMLA: 25 Years of Ground Control Developments, Practices, and Issues in Australia. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2006.