Large Scale Ground Instability Caused By Failure of Underlying Pillars: A Case Study of Dynamic Multiple Seam Interaction

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Christopher Mark
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
4
File Size:
1003 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2012

Abstract

Severe dynamic multiple seam interactions can occur when active mine workings are subsided by underlying mining activity. The most dramatic events are usually caused by longwall mining or pillar recovery beneath open, overlying entries. But pillars in abandoned workings can also fail and cause subsidence and damage an overlying mine. This paper describes a case history in which an apparent ?pillar squeeze? in the abandoned workings of a lower seam was initiated during retreat mining in an upper seam. The event subsequently extended more than 1,500 ft and ultimately closed the upper seam mine. Analysis indicated that the pillars in the lower mine were adequately sized for the lower seam mining and were not affected by the initial development above them. When retreat mining in the upper seam had progressed several hundred feet, however, the pillars located directly beneath the pillar line were overloaded, and an extensive squeeze initiated in the underlying workings. The squeeze, in turn, subsided the overlying workings, causing widespread rib falls and roof instability. Previous examples of dynamic multiple seam interactions resulting from delayed subsidence of underlying workings have been reported in the literature. This is, apparently, the first recorded incident in which pillar recovery in an active mine triggered pillar failure in an underlying mine, which then triggered a dynamic interaction that impacted the active overlying seam.
Citation

APA: Christopher Mark  (2012)  Large Scale Ground Instability Caused By Failure of Underlying Pillars: A Case Study of Dynamic Multiple Seam Interaction

MLA: Christopher Mark Large Scale Ground Instability Caused By Failure of Underlying Pillars: A Case Study of Dynamic Multiple Seam Interaction. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2012.

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