IC 6738 Blasting Practices As They Affect The Roof Of Coal Mines In Ohio, Pennsylvania, And West Virginia ? Reason For Investigation

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. N. Geyer
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
15
File Size:
1832 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1933

Abstract

In coal mining it is essential to maintain the roof over working places and roadways in the safest condition possible. To this end every effort should be made to win the coal with the least injury to the immediate roof strata, as broken strata certainly present a greater hazard than a sound roof. The chief causes of injury to the roof in mining are inherent in the method of development and recovery and the blasting practices followed. The first, which may produce severe stresses in the roof, weakening it over comparatively large areas has been discussed in previous papers3 and will not be treated here. The second cause is local in effect, but with the same general method of blasting being employed throughout a mine having uniform roof conditions, similar effects on the roof may be expected. In the Bureau's investigation of accidents caused by falls of roof and coal it has been necessary to make a careful study of blasting practices and their effect on the immediate roof. The purpose of this paper is to show the effect of the observed methods of blasting on different types of roof and to point out methods that have been proved to be least harmful to the roof strata. The data used in preparing this paper have been compiled from reports made by Bureau engineers engaged in the study of falls of roof and coal, and embrace mines opened in the Pittsburgh coal in Ohio and Pennsylvania and the Pittsburgh and Sewickley coals in West Virginia.
Citation

APA: J. N. Geyer  (1933)  IC 6738 Blasting Practices As They Affect The Roof Of Coal Mines In Ohio, Pennsylvania, And West Virginia ? Reason For Investigation

MLA: J. N. Geyer IC 6738 Blasting Practices As They Affect The Roof Of Coal Mines In Ohio, Pennsylvania, And West Virginia ? Reason For Investigation. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1933.

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