OFR-167-81 Pre-Mining Identification Of Hazards Associated With Coal Mine Roof Measures

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 208
- File Size:
- 67630 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1979
Abstract
The geology of the roof of the Pittsburgh coal bed was studied and mapped in nine contiguous counties containing the bulk of the remaining reserves of this coal bed in the northern Appalachian Coal Basin. Drill core records from Belmont and Monroe counties, Ohio, Washington and Greene counties Pennsylvania, and Ohio, Marshall, Wetzel, Monongalia, and Marion counties, West Virginia provided the data for twelve computer generated regional geologic variable maps. Four of these geologic variables (overburden thickness, vertical distance to the rider coal, lithology at the five foot horizon above the roof of the mineable Pittsburgh seam, and the number of lithologic changes within the 30 foot interval above the roof of the mineable Pittsburgh seam) were used to estimate the risk of potential roof falls by a methological scheme developed during this study. A hazard zone risk map was developed showing a generalized regional trend of increasing risk from west to east across the basin. Mapping of individual geologic variables and mapping of hazard risk can be done at any scale. The accuracy of the mapping is primarily dependent on the density of the drill core records. Geologic feature maps and the hazard risk map contained in this report are reduced (1 :500,000 scale) versions of the larger scale (1 :62,500) maps prepared for the Bureau of Mines as map folios.
Citation
APA:
(1979) OFR-167-81 Pre-Mining Identification Of Hazards Associated With Coal Mine Roof MeasuresMLA: OFR-167-81 Pre-Mining Identification Of Hazards Associated With Coal Mine Roof Measures. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1979.