Slope Stability at Open Cut Mining Due to Subsidence on Old Underground Mining Area

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Andre Zingano
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
6
File Size:
1798 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2013

Abstract

An underground mine using room and pillar and retreat mining methods was developed during the 1950?s. In 2009 an open cast mine was opened in the same reserve with the objective of mining five coal seams including the one previously mined. Recently, a series of slope failures were detected at the open cast mine. The surface mine map was overlain on the underground mine map, and it was observed that the slope failures were located above a retreat mined area where the overburden had caved and the ground subsided. The deformation and displacement attributable to subsidence caused a loss of strength in the overburden strata. The objective of this paper is to study the causes of slope sliding (or failure) due to the ground subsidence of rock layers above oldmined out areas. A map was created to overlay the two mines -- the abandoned underground mine and the active surface mining. Two- and three-dimension numerical modeling was conducted to simulate the slope behavior and to verify whether the mine subsidence was the cause of slope instability. This study indicated that the subsided rock layers were the cause of slope instability and sliding.
Citation

APA: Andre Zingano  (2013)  Slope Stability at Open Cut Mining Due to Subsidence on Old Underground Mining Area

MLA: Andre Zingano Slope Stability at Open Cut Mining Due to Subsidence on Old Underground Mining Area. International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2013.

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