Mining a Moving Orebody: Sill Pillar Extraction in a Kimberlite Pipe with Unique Geotechnical Challenges

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Jeffrey D.S.H. Oke Anna P. Perry Craig J. Archibald
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
1899 KB
Publication Date:
May 2, 2026

Abstract

Late-stage sill pillar extraction in an orebody experiencing large ground movement relative to the deposit’s footwall/hangingwall presents significant geotechnical challenges that are not well documented in literature. This paper presents a case study of sill pillar extraction in the A154 North kimberlite pipe at the Diavik Diamond Mine, Canada, where progressive, then accelerating vertical displacement occurred during the final stages of underground mining. The A154N orebody was mined using longhole open stoping with cemented and uncemented rockfill and consisted of multiple mining blocks separated by sill pillars. As mining advanced, downward migration of the kimberlite pipe relative to the surrounding granite was observed, with displacement rates increasing during sill pillar extraction. This paper documents the extraction of the A/B and B/C sill pillars, with a primary focus on the B/C Sill Pillar, where geotechnical interaction was most pronounced. Observed ground behaviour, monitoring data, ground control strategies, and operational responses are presented. The development and evolution of sill-pillar-specific TARP is described, highlighting the requirement for an observational, context-driven approach that integrates displacement rates, spatial relevance, and geotechnical inspections. The case study demonstrates that safe sill pillar extraction is achievable when displacement mechanisms are well understood and managed through adaptive monitoring and flexible TARPs. The lessons learned from A154N provide practical guidance for underground operations encountering moving orebodies and emphasize the importance of treating sill pillar behaviour as a distinct geotechnical problem.
Citation

APA: Jeffrey D.S.H. Oke Anna P. Perry Craig J. Archibald  (2026)  Mining a Moving Orebody: Sill Pillar Extraction in a Kimberlite Pipe with Unique Geotechnical Challenges

MLA: Jeffrey D.S.H. Oke Anna P. Perry Craig J. Archibald Mining a Moving Orebody: Sill Pillar Extraction in a Kimberlite Pipe with Unique Geotechnical Challenges. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2026.

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