Mining Publication: Seismicity and Stress Changes Subsequent to Destress Blasting at the Galena Mine and Implications for Stress Control Strategies
Keywords:
Original creation date: January 1993
The U.S. Bureau of Mines conducted research at the Galena Mine, Wallace, ID, with the aim of mitigating the effects of rock bursting. A digital seismic array and an array of borehole pressure cells had been installed near the site of a stope undergoing mining and periodic distressing.
Authors: FM Boler, PL Swanson
Report of Investigations - January 1993
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 10003155
U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines, Report of Investigations 9448, 1993 Jan:1-21
See Also
- 60 Years of Rockbursting in the Coeur D'Alene District of Northern Idaho, USA: Lessons Learned and Remaining Issues
- Behavior of a Coal Pillar Prone to Burst in the Southern Appalachian Basin of the United States
- A Century of Bureau of Mines/NIOSH Explosives Research
- Development of a Statistical-Analytical Approach for Assessing Coal Bump Potential
- Diagnosing and Controlling Moisture-Sensitive Roof in Coal Mines
- Dynamic Failure in Deep Coal: Recent Trends and a Path Forward
- A Gas Pressure-Based Drift Round Blast Design Methodology
- Technology News 522 - Blast Area Security: Flyrock Safety
- Toolbox Training on Flyrock Awareness
- Work Practices to Manage Bump Prone Ground
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program