![Publication first page](images/sp18-94.jpg) | Document cover page Click the image to enlarge |
One of the keys to miner safety and an efficient recovery of the reserves is to design sufficiently sized production pillars that will prevent pillar squeezes, excessive pillar spalling, severe floor heave, roof falls, and pillar bumps. Currently, few mine oeprators design sections that will be retreat mined using empirical formulas or numerical models that estimate abutment pressures generated by adjacent mined-out workings. The U.S. Bureau of Mines is in the process of field testing and refining a "user friendly" computer program called Analysis of Retreat Mining Pillar Stability (ARMPS) to estimate abutment pressures developed during pillaring. Analyses of 68 pillar design case histories using the ARMPS program indicate that it can be successfully employed to predict pillar line stability during retreat mining operations.
Author(s): | Chase-FE, Mark-C |
Reference: | In: Peters RH, ed. Improving Safety at Small Underground Mines. United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines SP 18-94, 1994; :15-23 |
sp18-94 (PDF, 8693 KB)
A link above requires the Adobe Acrobat® Reader. You can download a reader for free from Adobe through our Accessibility/Tools page. |
![Get Adobe Reader](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20090110191911im_/http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/mining/aboutus/images/getacro.gif) |
|