Effects of Subsidence on Steeptopography and Cliff Lines
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 1364 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1992
Abstract
A two year study into the effects of coal mining induced  subsidence on cliff lines was undertaken by the Department of  Mineral Resources with the support of a grant under the National  Energy Research, Development and Demonstration Program. A  new monitoring technique, using an Electronic Distance Meter  and acrylic reflectors attached to the cliffs, provided safety for the  surveyors and extensive and accurate three dimensional  displacement data on the movement of the cliffs as they were  being undermined. The study report included many graphs showing the  measured vertical and horizontal displacements, differential  subsidence, tilts and strains and included analysis of these  movements with various parameters, such as, seam thickness,  depth of cover and distances between the reflectors, longwall  face and the edge of the chain pillar. Some of these graphs are  presented in this paper and could be used, with caution, to  predict subsidence movements around other cliff lines, after  allowing for differences in geology and mining layout. A mechanism is suggested as an explanation for the  observed high horizontal movements around the cliff lines.  Sixteen percent of the overall lengths of cliffs that were  undermined during the monitoring study fell and the contributions  of various factors that appeared to influence the cliff falls are  discussed. It is concluded that no single factor dominated as the  major cause of the cliff falls and, often, many factors combined to  cause cliff face instability.
Citation
APA: (1992) Effects of Subsidence on Steeptopography and Cliff Lines
MLA: Effects of Subsidence on Steeptopography and Cliff Lines. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1992.
