Risk Assessment of Surface Fracture Endangered Ranges Over Shallow Mine Workings

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Axel Preusse Heinz-Jiirgen Kateloe Anton Sroka Peter Fischer
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
8
File Size:
1260 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

"Since mining in Germany has a long history, there are still many locations where the surface fracture problem has to be solved. Shallow mine workings from an earlier era can affect the surface in a discontinuous way. In many cases, due to light overburden load, those mine rooms did not collapse and a downfall can suddenly happen for many reasons, e.g., in connection with a changed load entry into the subsurface or by additional influence of water. This results in ground movements, which in extreme cases, appear as surface fractures.Depending on the use of the surface, ground movements caused in such a way constitute an endangerment by law. Particularly, within the southern Ruhr district, surface fracture and subsidence endangered ranges are determined on the basis of an empirical method that resulted from a systematic evaluation of surface fractures and rock disclosures. This method indicates maximum ranges within which impacts from abandoned shallow mine workings must be assumed.With a special emphasis on a risk management approach, RWTH Aachen University adapted the model of stochastic media to the conditions of abandoned shallow mining to compute and illustrate potential ground movements due to the collapse of shallow mine workings. Further investigations were concerned with the analysis of characteristic parameters which can serve for the assessment of the surface fracture probability in a comparative view of different cases. In recent years, more than 50 surface fractures in the southern Ruhr district were analyzed in order to develop a risk assessment of surface fracture endangered ranges over shallow mine workings. The results that have been obtained so far are described in this paper.INTRODUCTIONAbandoned underground mine workings of shallow depth can pose a threat to the surface. Due to small overburden rock loads, shallow excavations often remain intact for decades after the operations have ceased and may collapse abruptly (Braemer et al., 2005; Hollmann and Nuerenberg, 1972; Preusse et al., 2007). Several approaches for prognosis of surface fracture resulting from 97 subsurface collapse deal with this topic (Loebel and Sroka, 2001; Tajdus and Sroka, 2009)."
Citation

APA: Axel Preusse Heinz-Jiirgen Kateloe Anton Sroka Peter Fischer  (2010)  Risk Assessment of Surface Fracture Endangered Ranges Over Shallow Mine Workings

MLA: Axel Preusse Heinz-Jiirgen Kateloe Anton Sroka Peter Fischer Risk Assessment of Surface Fracture Endangered Ranges Over Shallow Mine Workings. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2010.

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